Are We Creating for the Algorithm or the Ancestors?
Mashoko Editorial Series
Ideas. Culture. Meaning.
Are We Creating for the Algorithm or the Ancestors?
By Samantha Deone Munyurwa
Editor’s Note
This
piece follows “Zimbabwe Doesn’t Have a Talent Problem — It Has
a Systems Problem.” Where that story examined structure — contracts,
platforms, and infrastructure — this one looks inward. It asks what happens to
culture, identity, and meaning when creativity is shaped primarily by
visibility, speed, and trends. Together, these pieces explore two sides of the
same struggle: how African creativity survives in systems that reward attention
more than intention.The algorithm wants attention. The ancestors want truth. Somewhere between
those two demands, the African creative is negotiating their soul. Not loudly
or dramatically, but quietly — in captions, edits, and decisions about what to
post and what to abandon. In moments when the real thing is almost said, then
softened; when the full story is almost shown, then cropped; when language is
almost spoken as it is, then translated before anyone even asks.
This happens because the algorithm is not neutral. It is a system, and
systems always shape behaviour. Over time, they do not just influence what we
produce, but how we think about producing it.
The algorithm is loud and insistent. It tells creatives when to post, which
formats work, and how long an idea is allowed to be before it becomes “too
much.” It rewards speed over intention, repetition over reflection, and
familiarity over depth. Work that fits the template travels easily; work that
does not often disappears, not because it lacks quality, but because it is not
legible to the machine.
Crucially, the algorithm does not ask where a creator is from or what
lineage they carry. It asks how clickable the work is. It does not care about context
or memory; it cares about engagement. Slowly, many creatives stop asking what
they are trying to say and begin asking what will perform. Creation shifts from
meaning to survival, from roots to reach, from memory to the moment.
This is not because creatives are shallow or unserious. It is because rent
is real, exposure feels like opportunity, and silence feels like failure. In
economies where funding is scarce and platforms feel like the only doorway, the
algorithm stops looking like a tool and starts behaving like a gatekeeper. To
be seen at all, creatives learn its language and shape their stories to fit its
appetite. Centuries are compressed into seconds. Complexity is flattened into
captions. Pain is packaged into something easily consumable.
There is nothing wrong with wanting visibility. Representation matters.
Being heard matters, especially for people whose stories have historically been
silenced, distorted, or ignored. The danger begins when culture itself is
flattened into aesthetic. Language becomes seasoning. Struggle becomes
branding. Identity becomes performance. Tradition becomes backdrop. Trauma
becomes trend. Heritage becomes hashtag.
At that point, creatives begin translating themselves instead of expressing
themselves. Edges are trimmed, roughness is smoothed out, and stories are
simplified. What travels is chosen over what is true, not out of shame, but out
of optimisation. Over time, optimisation reshapes intention. Stories that
require silence are rushed. Stories that need context are condensed. Stories
that demand patience are sped up. What cannot be summarised is skipped. What
cannot be monetised is sidelined.
When culture becomes content, something always gets lost in translation. Not
always immediately, and not always visibly. It shows up in what creatives stop
making, what they stop trusting, and what they quietly decide is too local, too
deep, too slow, or too difficult to explain. Eventually, many become fluent in
platform language while struggling to speak to their own people without
subtitles.
This is where the ancestors enter the conversation. Not as ritual or
spirituality in a narrow sense, but as memory. Ancestors are not ghosts; they
are archives. They represent continuity, context, and responsibility. They
remind us that creation did not begin with us and will not end with us. That we
are not origin points, but conduits — not sources, but carriers.
To create with the ancestors in mind is to ask different questions. What
does this preserve? What does it honour? What does it remember? What will it
mean when the trend is gone? Who will recognise themselves in this work, and
who will feel erased by it? It is an understanding that art is not only
expression, but inheritance. That stories are not just content, but carriers of
worldview. That language is not simply communication, but memory in motion.
Not everything meaningful is searchable. Not everything sacred is shareable.
Not everything valuable is viral. Some truths move slowly. Some stories require
sitting with. Some meanings need silence before they make sense. The ancestors
do not demand relevance; they demand responsibility.
Every creative feels the tension this creates, even if they do not say it
out loud. Do I follow the trend or trust the process? Do I chase reach or protect
the story? Do I feed the system or feed the spirit? Do I make what moves, or do
I make what matters? In a world that moves fast, numbers become validation,
silence feels like failure, and depth begins to feel risky.
Compromise rarely arrives all at once. It starts small. Stories are
shortened, softened, simplified, stylised. Safer angles are chosen.
Uncomfortable truths are avoided. Language is diluted. This does not happen
because creatives do not know better, but because they grow tired of speaking into
voids.
Yet virality fades, while meaning stays. Meaning, however, takes time. And
time feels expensive in systems that reward immediacy, where relevance expires
quickly and yesterday’s work is forgotten today. Depth does not disappear in
these environments; it simply moves slower. Slowness, unfortunately, is often
mistaken for irrelevance.
When creatives consistently bend to the algorithm, a quiet violence occurs.
Histories soften, languages dilute, and narratives lose sharpness. Work becomes
globally legible but locally hollow. Stories begin to sound the same, not
because experiences are identical, but because formats are dictated and
originality is punished if it does not perform quickly. This is not a call for
purity, but for balance. A culture that is always translating itself eventually
forgets how to speak to itself.
Erasure does not always look like deletion. Sometimes it looks like
repetition. Sometimes it looks like oversimplification. Sometimes it looks like
familiarity that comforts but leaves nothing behind. Stories may not disappear,
but they are told so shallowly that they lose the power to teach, disturb, or
transform. What remains is style without substance, representation without
responsibility, and aesthetic without ancestry.
The algorithm will move on. It always does. Formats change, platforms shift,
trends expire, and audiences scroll. The same system that rewards a creator
today can bury them tomorrow without explanation. Culture, however, remembers.
The work that survives is not always the loudest, but the work that is rooted —
work that knows where it comes from and refuses to rush what needs time.
To create for the ancestors is not to reject the present. It is to refuse to
sacrifice the future for it. It is a belief that depth is not obsolete, context
is not outdated, slowness is not laziness, and truth is not boring. Sometimes
the most radical act in a system obsessed with speed is patience. Sometimes the
most political act in a system obsessed with performance is sincerity.
Create for the moment if you must, but document for the future. Because long
after the numbers reset, long after platforms update, and long after trends
move on, the ancestors will still be listening.
Mashoko Movement
Editor’s Afterword
This piece is not an argument against platforms,
visibility, or progress. It is a pause.
African creatives today are navigating a
landscape where attention moves faster than meaning, and where survival often
demands adaptation. The question is not whether we should use these systems —
most of us must. The question is what we lose when we never step outside them
long enough to listen to ourselves.
Mashoko
Movement exists to hold space for that listening.
We believe creativity is not only about output,
performance, or reach. It is also about memory, responsibility, and continuity.
About knowing when to speak widely — and when to speak inward. About
understanding that not every story needs to travel far to matter deeply.
This story sits alongside others on this
platform not as instruction, but as reflection. An invitation to slow down. To
ask harder questions. To remember that culture does not begin on platforms — it
arrives there already carrying weight.
What we choose to protect in our work today
shapes what survives tomorrow.
—Samantha
Deone Munyurwa, Mashoko Movement

Spot on!! Love this perspective
ReplyDeleteThe is such a good read😘
Preach!!! We need to create from a place of purpose, not just for clicks.
ReplyDeleteAmazing perspective, this really is brilliant. It's true Zimbabwe clearly doesn't have a talent problem with work like this
ReplyDeleteInsightful!
ReplyDelete