Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie didn’t just influence global feminism - she redefined it through an African lens.
She traded medical school for writing, pursuing degrees in communication, political science and creative writing. Today, she is one of the world’s most influential authors, shaping conversations on gender, identity, power, and history.
Her works; novels, essays, plays and stories - have inspired films, fashion, music and cultural movements. We Should All Be Feminists became a global rallying cry, sampled by Beyoncé and worn on Dior runways. Half of a Yellow Sun became a major film.
As a child, she was denied a leadership position because “she was a girl.” Today, she is one of the most widely read African thinkers of our time - and a leader in every sense.
“A feminist is anyone who says: yes, there’s a problem with gender today and we must do better.”
“Never ever accept ‘because you are a woman’ as a reason for anything.”
“Women need to know that they matter. They matter equally.”
Chimamanda reminds the world that African women don’t need saving -they need space to lead.
#InvestInWomenAccelerateProgress
#AfricanWomenLead
#SheShiftsTheStory
#InternationalWomensDay2026
#WomensMonth2026
Many writers ask me where they can submit their work. I have compiled a list of magazines you can submit to and what they pay.
Please retweet so it can reach more writers who need this.
1. Propel magazine £20
2. Spectrum literary journal $25-100
3. The Southern Review $25-$300
“The erasure of African women through surnames is not tradition, and it is not culture. It is a quiet editing of who we are.“
@TheIjeomaNtada examines The Politics of Surnames and the Erasure of African Women⬇️
https://t.co/rdlSqjEI1p
For too long, stories about Africa have been shaped by narrow tropes o f poverty, conflict, corruption; repeated so often they’ve defined how the world sees the continent.
But Africa is more than stereotypes. It’s innovation, resilience, creativity, and progress. That’s why Africa No Filter, in partnership with The AI Shop, created the Africa Bias Buster. The first-of-its-kind AI-powered tool is built to make journalism about Africa more accurate, fair, and nuanced. What it does:
1. Flags stereotypes and biased language
2. Assigns a “bias score”
3. Suggests practical improvements for balance and context
Journalists and storytellers can now review their work through an African lens, ensuring diverse voices are represented and complex histories are respected because how Africa is covered shapes how Africa is seen, and how Africa is seen shapes the opportunities it gets. Ready to tell better stories?
Try the Africa Bias Buster today and be part of reframing the narrative: https://t.co/AGQe6TT7Ra
#AfricaBiasBuster #BustTheBias #BiasBusterDay
Funding opportunities for African storytellers. Tag someone who should apply in the comments.
The Harvard Radcliffe Fellowship program is open for applications:
👉🏾For writers, scholars, public intellectuals, and artists
👉🏾$78,000 stipend
👉🏾$5,000 for project expenses.
👉🏾Submit with work sample and recommendation letters
Deadline: 11 Sept
🔗:https://t.co/XSg3tRuAfm
Journalists can apply for Underreported Stories in Africa grants offered by the Pulitzer Center:
👉🏾Project must cover issues like sanitation, land degradation and coastal erosion, education, maternal health, and climate resilience.
👉🏾Projects must inform behaviour and policies
👉🏾For writers, photographers, radio producers, and filmmakers
👉🏾Staff and freelance journalists can apply
Deadline: Rolling
🔗: https://t.co/0egcZP1Qty
“There is not a person anywhere who can be a Christian without the Holy Spirit. There is not a person who can follow Christ without the help of the Holy Spirit.” #BillyGraham
Knighted in Belgium and celebrated worldwide, Chika Unigwe writes about identity, family, and finding home.
Curious about her writing journey or what fuels her creativity? Dive in.
#TheNigeriaPrizeForLiterature#NPL2025#2025LongList
Oh my God, Becky, look at this etymology, it is so interesting.
‘Booty’ meaning on💰is from the Middle Low German word ‘būte,’ meaning "distribution, share, plunder."
‘Booty’ meaning 🍑 is from an older English word meaning “buttocks,” later influenced by AAVE.