TM Smoke Signals: Building The Nation. A read by Monica Kamandau episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 30, 2026 · 2 MIN

TM Smoke Signals: Building The Nation. A read by Monica Kamandau

from TROUBLEMAKERS · host Beautiful Trouble

What does it really mean to “build the nation,” and who pays the price for that work? In this Smoke Signals episode, Monica Kamandau reads Building the Nation by Ugandan poet Henry Barlow, a biting and darkly humorous poem that exposes the everyday hypocrisies of power, privilege, and sacrifice in postcolonial African states. This reading lands powerfully in our current moment, where ordinary people are repeatedly told to endure hardship in the name of progress, stability, or patriotism. Key Ideas and Highlights Nation-building as performance, where power is exercised through routine and ceremony rather than service The quiet violence of inequality hidden behind jokes, lunches, and official duties Satire as resistance, and poetry as a mirror held up to political hypocrisy Why This Poem Still Matters Henry Barlow’s Building the Nation remains painfully relevant across Africa and beyond. It challenges listeners to question who benefits from the language of sacrifice, and whose hunger is normalised in the process. Monica Kamandau’s reading brings fresh urgency to the poem, inviting us to reflect on leadership, accountability, and the everyday cost of governance. Credits Poem: Building the Nation by Henry Barlow (Uganda). Reader: Monica Kamandau. Producer: Rodgers George. Licensing Anyone can use this podcast for free, with attribution to Troublemakers (the podcast). It is held under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License and can be used for radio or any other media. The Beautiful Trouble toolbox inspires our podcast.

What does it really mean to “build the nation,” and who pays the price for that work? In this Smoke Signals episode, Monica Kamandau reads Building the Nation by Ugandan poet Henry Barlow, a biting and darkly humorous poem that exposes the everyday hypocrisies of power, privilege, and sacrifice in postcolonial African states. This reading lands powerfully in our current moment, where ordinary people are repeatedly told to endure hardship in the name of progress, stability, or patriotism. Key Ideas and Highlights Nation-building as performance, where power is exercised through routine and ceremony rather than service The quiet violence of inequality hidden behind jokes, lunches, and official duties Satire as resistance, and poetry as a mirror held up to political hypocrisy Why This Poem Still Matters Henry Barlow’s Building the Nation remains painfully relevant across Africa and beyond. It challenges listeners to question who benefits from the language of sacrifice, and whose hunger is normalised in the process. Monica Kamandau’s reading brings fresh urgency to the poem, inviting us to reflect on leadership, accountability, and the everyday cost of governance. Credits Poem: Building the Nation by Henry Barlow (Uganda). Reader: Monica Kamandau. Producer: Rodgers George. Licensing Anyone can use this podcast for free, with attribution to Troublemakers (the podcast). It is held under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License and can be used for radio or any other media. The Beautiful Trouble toolbox inspires our podcast.

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TM Smoke Signals: Building The Nation. A read by Monica Kamandau

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The Bald Builders Breakfast Fix Radio The internet's favourite troublemakers are now on the Fix Radio breakfast airwaves. Tune in for trade banter, great stories and a unique brand of chaos every Monday to Friday at 6am.The Bald Builders Breakfast on Fix Radio is brought to you in partnership with TradePoint. Explicit Let's Give A Damn Nick Laparra Let's Give A Damn is your one-stop shop for inspiring, raw, no-bullshit conversations with damn-giving artists, activists, and troublemakers from all over the world. We believe that no one is free until everyone is free. With these conversations, we're trying to help you get free. Are you in? Welcome to Let's Give A Damn. Explicit Choke City David Vas & John Meyer  Yeehaw! Saddle up with Houston’s finest troublemakers, David Vas and John Mayer, on "Choke City." We're talking horses, housing crises, and everything in between! Expect belly laughs, wild tangents, and a rodeo of ridiculousness. Whether you’re a horse whisperer or just trying to pay rent, we’ve got the comedy gold to tickle your funny bone. Giddy up and join the chaos – it's gonna be a hoot and a half! Can you tell that was AI? pretty cool stuff guys. Explicit GUNWASH Heritage Radio Network HEYWHATSUP™? GUNWASH is the future of talk radio; a weekly 90 minute explosion of dark humor, eye-opening interviews, dancehall reggae and psychedelic sounds. Tune in for unguarded insight from the artists, musicians, troublemakers and curators shaping culture in the 21st century. Design, typography, astrophysics, dancehall reggae, conspiracy theories, illustration, drums, nuclear engineering, disco, Polo Ralph Lauren, crime, the 1990's, iconography, iced coffee, late night downtown, drummers, Byzantine art, Air Jordans, micro biology, African fuzz rock, 2nd Street, barbour jackets, exo-politics, guitars, beer, Japanese magazines, Southhampton, turntables, MK ultra, comic books, Miami, Arthur Russel, fly fishing, pirate radio, user interface graphics, ebonics, the water crisis, Americana, wine, silkscreens, bikes, Grateful dead, goo balls, red wing boots, soca music, photoshop, cognitive behavioral therapy, KISS, local farming, talk radio, patois, and of course Brooklyn. Explicit

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What does it really mean to “build the nation,” and who pays the price for that work? In this Smoke Signals episode, Monica Kamandau reads Building the Nation by Ugandan poet Henry Barlow, a biting and darkly humorous poem that exposes the everyday...

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