Journalism Hirsch was a legal correspondent for
The Guardian. She has lived in Britain and
Senegal, and served as
The Guardians West Africa correspondent, based in
Accra, Ghana. From 2014 to 2017, she was the Social Affairs and Education Editor at
Sky News. Among other publications and outlets for which she has written are
The Observer,
The Evening Standard,
Vogue, and
Prospect. Hirsch contributed the piece "What Does It Mean to Be African?" to
Margaret Busby's 2019 anthology
New Daughters of Africa.
Guardian article about Nelson's Column In August 2017, in
The Guardian, Hirsch questioned whether
Nelson's Column should remain in place, with the implication it might be removed. Not long afterward, the art historian and former museum director Sir
Roy Strong said the suggestion the column should be taken down was a "ridiculous" viewpoint, commenting: "Once you start rewriting history on that scale, there won't be a statue or a historic house standing....The past is the past. You can't rewrite history." In an article introducing her television documentary, ''The Battle for Britain's Heroes'', Hirsch stated that she "wasn't actually waiting in a bulldozer, ready to storm
Trafalgar Square, as some people seemed to believe".
Publications Brit(ish) Hirsch's book
Brit(ish): On Race, Identity and Belonging () was published by
Jonathan Cape in January 2018. The book is part-memoir and discusses black history, culture and politics in the context of Britain, Senegal and Ghana. It became a
Sunday Times bestseller. Hirsch was awarded a
Royal Society of Literature Jerwood Prize for Non-Fiction while writing it in 2016.
Decolonising My Body Reviewing Hirsch's 2023 book,
Decolonising My Body: A Radical Exploration of Rituals and Beauty, Niellah Arboine wrote in
The Guardian: "If her first book Brit(ish) was about grappling with her identity as a black British woman of mixed heritage, Decolonising My Body aims to unpack how her identity and wider society have shaped her physically."
Television Hirsch has been a panellist on the
Sky News discussion programme
The Pledge.
''The Battle for Britain's Heroes'' In the television programme ''The Battle for Britain's Heroes'', first broadcast by Britain's
Channel 4 in late May 2018, Hirsch raised lesser-known aspects of the career of former British prime minister
Winston Churchill, such as his attitude to
Indians and
advocacy of tear gassing "uncivilised tribes" in
Mesopotamia (now partly modern-day Iraq) after the
First World War. In his review of the programme,
Hugo Rifkind in
The Times wrote that the "subtext is often that Hirsch is attacking Britain in even mentioning this stuff", which itself implies, because of her own background that it "is frankly uppity of her", but Hirsch does not let "her views be defined in opposition to those of her detractors".
Enslaved Hirsch was co-presenter alongside
Samuel L. Jackson of the six-part television documentary series
Enslaved, premiered in 2020, which explores aspects of the history of the
transatlantic slave trade, including links to her personal history.
African Renaissance: When Art Meets Power In 2020, Hirsch presented the documentary series
African Renaissance: When Art Meets Power on
BBC Four. Hirsch visited
Ethiopia,
Senegal and
Kenya, meeting musicians and artists, and recounting the history of each country. In August 2021, it was announced Hirsch's production company Born in Me (its name references a quotation from
Kwame Nkrumah: "I am not African because I was born in Africa, but because Africa was born in me") had signed a deal with
Fremantle.
Africa Rising with Afua Hirsch In June 2023, Hirsch presented the three-part BBC documentary series
Africa Rising with Afua Hirsch exploring how young creatives are reinventing culture across Africa.
Teaching Hirsch holds the Wallis Annenberg Chair in Journalism and Communication at the
University of Southern California in
Los Angeles. ==Recognition==