
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


đŹđ§ ENGLISH
In this episode of Dedicated Podcast, I sit down with Danjuma, storyteller, engineer, and author of the photo book Waka Waka â Observations on Contemporary African Life, Culture, and Landscapes.
Recorded in Geneva during the European leg of his book tour, this conversation dives into the origins of Waka Waka, a deeply human project built from over 20 years of travel across 16 African countries. Through photography, writing, and reflection, Danjuma documents everyday life, culture, movement, food, leisure, and memory â far beyond the clichĂ©s often associated with Africa.
We talk about curiosity, storytelling as responsibility, documenting a continent in transformation, and why this book is not just a coffee table object, but a living archive. Danjuma also shares insights on self-publishing, collaboration, representation, and what it truly means to tell stories responsibly in todayâs world.
A thoughtful conversation about Africa, memory, history in motion, and the power of images to preserve what time tries to erase.
Waka Waka book
đ§ Episode in English.
đ«đ· FRANĂAIS
Dans cet Ă©pisode de Dedicated Podcast, je reçois Danjuma, storyteller, ingĂ©nieur et auteur du livre photo Waka Waka â Observations on Contemporary African Life, Culture, and Landscapes.
EnregistrĂ©e Ă GenĂšve lors de sa tournĂ©e europĂ©enne, cette conversation revient sur la naissance de Waka Waka, un projet profondĂ©ment humain, construit Ă partir de plus de 20 ans de voyages Ă travers 16 pays africains. Ă travers la photographie, lâĂ©criture et le rĂ©cit, Danjuma documente le quotidien, les cultures, les mouvements, la nourriture, le repos et la mĂ©moire â bien au-delĂ des clichĂ©s habituellement associĂ©s Ă lâAfrique.
On parle de curiositĂ©, de responsabilitĂ© du storytelling, de la nĂ©cessitĂ© de documenter un continent en pleine transformation, et de pourquoi ce livre nâest pas quâun simple coffee table book, mais une archive vivante. Danjuma partage aussi les coulisses de lâauto-Ă©dition, le travail collaboratif, la reprĂ©sentation et lâimportance de raconter des histoires avec justesse aujourdâhui.
Un Ă©change profond sur lâAfrique, la mĂ©moire, lâhistoire en mouvement et le pouvoir des images face au temps.
đ§ Ăpisode en anglais.
Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
By Dedicated PodcastđŹđ§ ENGLISH
In this episode of Dedicated Podcast, I sit down with Danjuma, storyteller, engineer, and author of the photo book Waka Waka â Observations on Contemporary African Life, Culture, and Landscapes.
Recorded in Geneva during the European leg of his book tour, this conversation dives into the origins of Waka Waka, a deeply human project built from over 20 years of travel across 16 African countries. Through photography, writing, and reflection, Danjuma documents everyday life, culture, movement, food, leisure, and memory â far beyond the clichĂ©s often associated with Africa.
We talk about curiosity, storytelling as responsibility, documenting a continent in transformation, and why this book is not just a coffee table object, but a living archive. Danjuma also shares insights on self-publishing, collaboration, representation, and what it truly means to tell stories responsibly in todayâs world.
A thoughtful conversation about Africa, memory, history in motion, and the power of images to preserve what time tries to erase.
Waka Waka book
đ§ Episode in English.
đ«đ· FRANĂAIS
Dans cet Ă©pisode de Dedicated Podcast, je reçois Danjuma, storyteller, ingĂ©nieur et auteur du livre photo Waka Waka â Observations on Contemporary African Life, Culture, and Landscapes.
EnregistrĂ©e Ă GenĂšve lors de sa tournĂ©e europĂ©enne, cette conversation revient sur la naissance de Waka Waka, un projet profondĂ©ment humain, construit Ă partir de plus de 20 ans de voyages Ă travers 16 pays africains. Ă travers la photographie, lâĂ©criture et le rĂ©cit, Danjuma documente le quotidien, les cultures, les mouvements, la nourriture, le repos et la mĂ©moire â bien au-delĂ des clichĂ©s habituellement associĂ©s Ă lâAfrique.
On parle de curiositĂ©, de responsabilitĂ© du storytelling, de la nĂ©cessitĂ© de documenter un continent en pleine transformation, et de pourquoi ce livre nâest pas quâun simple coffee table book, mais une archive vivante. Danjuma partage aussi les coulisses de lâauto-Ă©dition, le travail collaboratif, la reprĂ©sentation et lâimportance de raconter des histoires avec justesse aujourdâhui.
Un Ă©change profond sur lâAfrique, la mĂ©moire, lâhistoire en mouvement et le pouvoir des images face au temps.
đ§ Ăpisode en anglais.
Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.