Archive | February, 2010

Ok, this is just naughty!

Posted on 27 February 2010 by Codrin Arsene

New scam email got into my inbox today.  And it’s pretty disgusting. However, one can only wonder how people fall for this in the first place. One day I’ll tell you the story about the first scam email I ever received way back when I was a 15 year old student in Galati, Romania. And [...]

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Sarafina (1992): making a musical about apartheid or a swing and a miss

Posted on 23 February 2010 by Codrin Arsene

The idea that you can make a musical about apartheid gives me chills. To see it on my laptop screen seems even more inappropriate. In recent times, some wise directors tried to give a new perspective on the Holocaust by using movie genres other than dramas, and they succeeded. I cannot say the same about [...]

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On a new episode in Romanian politics and witchcraft connections

Posted on 23 February 2010 by Codrin Arsene

On February 10th Victor Ponta, a young member of the Romanian Chamber of Deputies was elected President of the Romanian Social Democrat Party (SDP) during an extraordinary party congress that took place in Bucharest. He narrowly defeated Mircea Geoana, the candidate who lost elections against Traian Basescu in the recent presidential elections that took place [...]

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White Hunter, Black Hurt (1990): layers and layers of scenes signifying nothing

Posted on 18 February 2010 by Codrin Arsene

After I reviewed Clint Eastwood’s latest movie, Invictus, an anthropologist I care deeply for sent me an email with her insights on the movie. She had this to say at the time: “I have complex feelings about Eastwood and his libertarian politics: for me, he has never understood social processes, and works with lone, heroic [...]

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Odinga talking about the dispute with President Kibaki

Posted on 18 February 2010 by Codrin Arsene

Given the charade going on in Kenya these days, Prime-Minister talks about the tensions between him and the President. Guess where? In Japan. Click and watch:

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Kirikou and the Sorceress (1998): a pure heart in a corrupt world

Posted on 17 February 2010 by Codrin Arsene

Somewhere in West Africa, Karaba is a mean sorceress who has killed almost an entire generation of warriors. She is so loathed and feared that she lives away from the village, on top of a hill, where her only friends are dreadful walking trees and little robot-like spies that keep her informed at all times. [...]

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From Zanzeland to Washington DC: Timeless Anxieties, Familiar Challenges

Posted on 16 February 2010 by Codrin Arsene

This is what I consider a food-for-thought essay. It’s a little long (3.5 pages single-spaced) but I think it’s worth reading it. “New Situations Demand New Magic…”[1] In Witchcraft, Oracles, and Magic Among the Azande, E.E.  Evans Pritchard analyzes a society which is broadly characterized by unchanging traditions. However, various events that are out of [...]

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Notable Articles of the Day 02.16.10

Posted on 16 February 2010 by Codrin Arsene

Rogue States and Rogue Presidents make the news this week. Libya denies visas for Schengen Visa Passport Holders. The European Union extends Zimbabwe sanctions for another year citing lack of progress in the power-sharing agreement. Ironically, this will reflect bad on Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai as he is the one who has campaigned for sanction [...]

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Blood Coltan: What Congo has and Western companies would kill for

Posted on 14 February 2010 by Codrin Arsene

A French team of journalists traveled to Congo, Brussels and Paris in order to reveal to the general public some of the reasons why the Democratic Republic of Congo is still a war torn zone. Instead of providing the audience with a larger picture, something I would have done instead, they focused on one commodity [...]

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State of Denial (2003): The Age and the State of Betrayal in the battle against AIDS

Posted on 13 February 2010 by Codrin Arsene

The State of Denial is a heartbreaking documentary that explores the difficulties HIV-infected South Africans face on a daily basis. And their inspiring struggles. It provides an insider’s view, South African born director Elaine Epstein, into the complicated factors that allow HIV/AIDS to spread at such an alarming speed. The documentary focuses on what used [...]

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Awesome quote of the day

I’m going through my research material from Uganda as I’m preparing to write my masters thesis. I just came across one of the most hilarious quotes on my tapes. Check this out (it’s by a woman craft maker):

 

A  man who speaks and gives orders is that who has money to meet the needs of his wife. But if a man cannot fulfill those duties, then he is not a man after all, right? He’s just a nagging woman with a penis.

 

 

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This Vanguard reportage deserves to be seen.

I don’t normally post things that are not Africa-related but this young man from Taiwan is simply amazing. Lin Yu Chun participated in a Taiwanese version of the American Idol called Super Star Avenue, singing the song I will always love you by Whitney Houston. I’ll keep it short: his version of the song is clearly better than what Mrs. Houston is capable of singing right now. Some dubbed him the “Susan Boyle of Taiwan” and there might just be something of this young man. Check it out yourselves. I’m sure you’ll be surprised as well.

To all of us who have experienced the adventure that is a boda-boda (motorcycle-taxi in East Africa, primarily in Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and DR Congo)








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A Romanian in Africa by Codrin Arsene is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.
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