Léonora Miano imagines a new world for children born of the relationship between Africa and Europe: Afropeans, no longer relegated to a racialized vision but recognized for what they are, their experience and culture. Afropeans have constructed themselves as a minority, an identity that complicates solidarity between Afropeans and sub-Saharans. Europe sees as African primarily its citizens of sub-Saharan descent, which does not help Afro-Europeans integrate or feel they have a stake in their country. But Afro-Europeans can embody a fraternal, anti-imperialist, and anti-racist project for society. In a Europe plagued by identity-based tensions, the Afropean perspective still seems utopian.