WEBVTT 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (frenetic music) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (applause) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 My talk, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 about Afrofuturism and the African. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Afrofuturism is considered what speculative fiction, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 myths, legends, science fiction, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and the stories of that genre are to African Americans, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Africa, Africa of the Diaspora, and black people in general. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 What (inaudible) refers it to is what blackness looks like in the future, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 real or imagined. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Now, the history of Afrofuturism comes from America 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and was first coined by a man called Mark Dery 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and when he started talking about Afrofuturism 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 he talks about the idea of literature, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 so the books that Octavia Butler would write 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and things like that, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 but then it also moved into a new region of music 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 so we would have people like Sun Ra and George Clinton 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 but for me, especially Sun Ra because he has a special place in my heart, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 He believed that he came from the planet Saturn 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and came to earth to spread the message of love and peace. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Like in his movie, "Space is the Place" 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 he introduces the idea of "alien" 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 to black people in America. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But that was very specifically about African Americans 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and I wanted to find a place for Afrofuturism in Africa. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 The first place that that led me to is Mount Kenya, obviously, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 where the god of Mount Kenya lives according to the Kikuyu tradition 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 so Mwene Nyaga is seated on top of this mountain 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and he introduced ourAdam and Eve, Gikuyu and Mumbi, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and from that were descendants of the nine children. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But even before the idea of the myth of Gikuyu and Mumbi, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 the idea of Afrofuturism or legends and myths 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and stories that were told to me by my mother 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and she is a great storyteller as well as a pediatrician 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 so I'd have to say that her stories were truly science fiction, truly. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (laughter) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 I remember her telling me stories about the way if I ate the pumpkin, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 my hair would grow. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Or if --which is strange-- if I attach leeches to my nipples, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 my breasts would grow. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 And also... I did it. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (laughter) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 And also, she would talk about the way 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 that in the Kikuru tradition, if you circle the Mugumo tree seven times, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 you would change sex. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Growing up, obviously, past my mother's stories, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 I began to read stories of my own and they were inevitably filled 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 with the ogre and the young girl who wandered off into the forest 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and what would happen if she wandered off into the forest 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and how she would meet this terrible ogre 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 because she departed from the ways of the society. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 That's also when I met Ben Okri and the idea of the spirit child 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and the idea of using spiritualism or mythical realism within storytelling. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 That, for me, is also a link to Afrofuturism. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But what really inspired me about Ben Okri 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 was his ability to merge seamlessly the idea of the spirit world and fiction. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 And the idea that we live in a continent 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 that is so closely linked to the spirit world 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 that we use it in a very everyday sort of way 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and that is true when we come to witch doctors, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 sangoma, or people who deal with the spiritual realms. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 It's also true of genies of the coast 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and I don't even know how many of you have gone to Mombasa or Zanzibar, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 but I know from personal experience 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 there was a cat that followed me for five kilometers, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 or every time I turned around it was there 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and I could have sworn it was a genie. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 I'm positive about it. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 In fact, I have friends who attest to the fact as well. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 So Afrofuturism has always been part of our culture, part of us. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But more interestingly, it has been part of the history of West Africa. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Now, West Africa is believed, especially in money, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 there is a nation of people called the Dogan 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and the Dogan people believe that they were told 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 about a planet called Ceres B 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 before it was discovered by Western scientists. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 They were told of this planet by a race of amphibian-like aliens 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 who came in from the ocean 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and told them, not only about a planet, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 but also about the rotation of the planet 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and how it worked in space. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Some of the cave drawings, like these, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 showed the amphibian creatures at the bottom of the people, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 or the people who came to speak to them about this planet. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Then, later on, it was discovered, so they had the knowledge in 1930 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 but it wasn't until the '70s that the actual planet was seen. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 If that isn't curious science fiction, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 history, I don't know what is. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But also from South Africa we have people like Credo Mutwa 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 who believes there is a reptilian race of people 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 whose bloodline extends into modern day royalty 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and modern day business people 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and is what, I guess, theorists would call the Illuminati. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 So we've established that fact-- fact or fiction. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Myths have always existed very, very closely to us, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 but there's been a growing need for the idea of Afrofuturism 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and I'd have to ask why? 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 And when talking about it, I talked about it to a friend of mine, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and he said, "Africans are inherently futuristic, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 given the sheer capriciousness of our present situation." 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 That was my friend Michael [inaudible] who reckons he's very clever. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Then there was a writer called David William Cohen who says, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 "The struggle of man against power 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 is the struggle of man against forgetting." 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 This makes a lot of sense because it's been suggested 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 that Afrofuturism, as a genre, is growing 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 because as Africans or as descendants of Africa, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 we've never had a space or a voice within our own history. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 We've never had a chance to talk about our own history. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 It's always been written by other people. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Now, because we don't have a link to our own history 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 or because we didn't have a grasp on our own history, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 we're using Afrofuturism to stake a place in the future 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 so we can strongly identify ourselves in the future. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Mark Dery argues that the younger generation 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 have used technology as a way to insert themselves 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 into both a real and imagined landscape 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 to physically assert their presence in the present 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and to make it clear they intend to stake their claim in the future. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 So because we can't reclaim our history, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 we are now trying to project our own future. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Of course, in projecting our own future, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 we have to ask where are we doing it? In what spaces are we doing that? 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 In Kenya, we're doing that in music 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and we have some of my favorite musicians here as well 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 but just a band have, to me, demonstrated Afrofuturism 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 in their own music, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 especially in one of their latest songs [inaudible]. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 They say, "Give me five, it's good to be alive. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 The sky seems so far away. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Hope you know we've been to the moon and back. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Be sure that nothing's going to hold us back." 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 So we know that we are larger than life. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 We know that we are larger than earth. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 We know we are larger than the cosmos 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and that is reflected in our work, and in our music. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Around the continent, obviously, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 there's people like Nnedi Okorafor 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 who wrote a book called "Who Fears Death" 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and this is a matte painting done by Ivonne Wende, a Kenyan 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 about the book "Who Fears Death" 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and in "Who Fears Death" what Nnedi does 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 is that she uses the idea of manipulating technology as we know it 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 to understand where we are 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 or to be able to grasp our environment 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and as Afrikans, we do that all the time. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 We use technology that has been used outside of our space 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 or that was invented outside of our own spaces 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and use it in our own ways. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 What Nnedi Okarafor does in "Who Fears Death" 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 is that she creates these particular machines 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 called water catcher stations, and they absorb 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 all the atmosphere from around them 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 that people can take baths, can have clean drinking water, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 [inaudible] and so forth. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 That's the fictional side of it. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 In practice, how are Kenyans using Afrofuturism? 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 I have to say I would refer to Afrigadgets, the website 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 that has a plethora of different people doing very inventive and for me, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 very futuristic things including a young 13 year old called Richard Turere 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and what he did is that he created a way to run a flashlight invention, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 run off a car battery, to keep predators away from his family's property. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 That to me is a very Afrofuturist sense of using technology, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 but in a very rustic way, in a way that makes sense to us. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 In my film "Pumzi" I used the idea of technology 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and this is a picture of what we call self-power generator 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and there would be these people running on treadmills 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and they would generate electricity in order to have power where they lived. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 I thought I was being creative, imaginative, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 until I googled it. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (muted laughter) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 And I wasn't so much. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Self power generators do exist. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 They do, they're our ways of using kinetic energy to power stations. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 It's not completely in practice at the moment 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 but it's an idea of the ways that we can use technology 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 in a very Afrofuturist setting 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 to be able to run our everyday things. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 There's obviously nowhere we can talk about the future 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 without talking about technology. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 In "Pumzi", I also talk about the idea of communication, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and I know from my own experience 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 that I would be sitting across the table from a friend 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and we would tweet each other. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Now we have learned to communicate in 140 characters or less. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Even when I'm talking about the things that are happening in my life, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 I'll use hashtag, as if it were part of the sentence. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 In "Pumzi", what I did is I created this idea, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and we'll see it in a second, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 about how we use different layers of technology in order to communicate 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and the thought process of that 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 is that we're looking for more efficient ways of communicating 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 rather than finding emotive ways of communicating. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 For me, what is most important and what I've found from making "Pumzi" 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 is that the idea of Afrofuturism worked the best for me 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 because I'm able to extrapolate on ideas and thoughts 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and feelings I have about the way the world is running 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 without offending people or without being too heavy handed 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and for me, what "Pumzi" was was a reflection of society 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and it's set 75 years after the Water War 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and where everybody lives inside because they've been told the outside is dead. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 until one character, Asher, wakes up from a dream 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 which is not allowed, because everybody is supposed to be taking dream suppresants 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and she finds a seed that she then plants, and it starts to grow. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But in a world where the outside is dead, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and her being the curator of a virtual natural museum, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and that's the only place you have access to nature, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 she had to find a way outside of herself 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 to be able to prove that life exists. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 That's "Pumzi". 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But my metaphor for "Pumzi" is about life and sacrifice 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and the fact that we ourselves have to mother Mother Nature. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 We have to make sacrifices in order to live in this one 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and we have to know that our own behaviors will affect generations to come. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 As a storyteller in the tradition of the [inaudible] 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 my job is to be a seer, not just a historian 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and to be able like [Mogo] who predicted the coming of white people 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 as if they were colorful butterflies or the train in the sense of the way 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 that he saw a snake with smoke coming out of its head 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 to be able to say, there is more to life than we see 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and listen to the storytellers. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 They also have a voice, and their voice is important. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 So, I leave you with a clip from "Pumzi" 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and this is just an indication of the possibilities of the human mind, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 the possibilities of Afrofuturism 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and how Afrofuturism relates to us as Africans. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (applause)