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To realise belatedly that there are Swahili epic poems which rival their European equivalents for s
To realise belatedly that there are Swahili epic poems which rival their European equivalents for s
To realise belatedly that there are Swahili epic poems which rival their European equivalents for s
To realise belatedly that there are Swahili epic poems which rival their European equivalents for s
To realise belatedly that there are Swahili epic poems which rival their European equivalents for s
To realise belatedly that there are Swahili epic poems which rival their European equivalents for s
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Giles Foden:
Writing about Africa by Africans has been part of my literary apprenticeship, standing alongside woGiles Foden:
I grew up in the African bush in Malawi, Tanzania and Uganda, which is my thing. I love the smell oGiles Foden:
I can't think of a specific meal, but my favourite country for food has got to be France. I love thGiles Foden:
In Kenya, crime and terrorism are deeply linked, not least by the failure of successive Kenyan goveGiles Foden:
Ordinary Kenyans rightly want to be able to shop safely, and there is a long history of them doingGiles Foden:
You can gesture at the transnational problem of Islamist terrorism all you like, but it's just hotGiles Foden:
The search for inventive ways of telling the tale of Christ's birth has been going on a long time;Giles Foden:
In any culture, if information is to maximise in a contextual space, and new meanings be born, theGiles Foden:
Suffering produces a recursion to the tribe, to one's own kind. When a lot of people suffer, tribesGiles Foden:
The forgiveness that comes of patient interpretation seems impossible when those nearest to your he