Is Black British English a form of Time Travel via Afrofuturism?⏳
Description
What does it mean to speak the future while carrying the past? In this episode, we dive into Black British English as an Afrofuturist language, one shaped by migration, resistance, and imagination. We explore how the hybrid dialects of Black Britain remix ancestral languages, colonizer tongues, and global Black languages to create something radically new: a sonic space where survival and style converge.
Using the visionary work of Janelle Monáe especially her android mythology via albums like The ArchAndroid and Dirty Computer we think through how language itself can be cyborg, insurgent, and speculative. Just like Monáe constructs a Black queer future through sound, costume, and narrative, Black British English crafts a world beyond Empire through voice and vernacular.
From “mandem” to “allow it,” every utterance becomes a glitch in linear time, a tool for refusing the present and imagining otherwise.
This episode asks: What does our accent say about our future? And how do we use language to hack the system just like Janelle does?