The poets taking part are:
- 2pm-3.30pm BST: Feyisayo Aluko (Nigeria), Adaora Raji, (Nigeria) Eboh Solomon Ogbonnaya (Nigeria), and
- 6pm-7.30pm BST: Eulinda Antonette Clarke-Akalanne (Barbados / UK), Phares Barine (Kenya), and Sello Huma (South Africa).
ABOUT VOLUME 3
The collection will feature poems from 63 poets based on the continent and in the diaspora.
UPCOMING SESSIONS
As part of the process leading to the publication of Volume 3, we are hosting a series of online readings at which poets contributing to the anthology can read and discuss their work.
The next reading and conversation session takes place online on May 30:
May 30 (Sessions 7-9) (
Registration Link)
2pm-3.30pm;
4pm-5.30pm &
6pm-7.30pm UK Time
The list of poets taking part in the sessions will be given closer to the events.
In June, we will be concentrating on
As British As Fish and Chips, the anthology focusing on how African and Asian refugees are being left to drown in the English Channel and how those who survive are being swapped and traded between the erstwhile human trafficking and slave trading empires and colonial powers, Britain and France.
Details on events taking place as part of this focus will be given closer to the time.
RECORDING
The readings and conversations will be recorded and made publicly accessible through the Africa Migration Report Poetry Anthology Series
video playlist and through social media and the website we are building around the series.
ABOUT THE SERIES
The Africa Migration Report Poetry Anthology Series is volunteer-led and is organised by Forced Migration and The Arts in association with CivicLeicester and the migrants' rights collective,
Regularise.
The series was inspired by the
Africa Migration Report: 2nd Edition (African Union and International Organisation for Migration, 2024), and has open calls for poems (40 lines or less) and short prose (100 words or less) exploring:
We take the African diaspora to include all people of African descent in all the ways they define themselves, e.g. African, African American, African Asian, African Brazilian, African Canadian, African Caribbean, African Italian, African Latino, African Palestinian, Afropean, Afro Turk, Black, Black British, Black Canadian, etc.
The series is currently not in receipt of funding from any source.
To cover some of the costs associated with the work, we have a
crowdfunding appeal.