In this essay Katherine Franke examines two contemporary cites in which state efforts to eradicate the traces of empire and to resurrect an authentic post-colonial nation have produced sexual subjects that serve as a kind of existential residue and remainder of a demonized colonial past and absence. Looking first at post-colonial Zimbabwe, Franke argues that President Mugabe’s aggressively homophobic policies have played a key role in fortifying his leadership as authentically African and post-colonial. Franke then turns to current efforts by the Mubarak government in Egypt to publically prosecute men for having sex with men. The Mubarak government has used homosexual show trials, first in security courts, and then in civilian courts, as a ...
In recent times, there have been emerging issues on the relevance of the feminist movement in sub-Sa...
Literature on sexuality and citizenship has demonstrated the myriad of ways that states use legislat...
Sexual violence finds its most brutal expression during armed conflicts. Across culture and time, s...
In this essay Katherine Franke examines two contemporary cites in which state efforts to eradicate t...
In this essay, Katherine Franke explores how dissent becomes a different, and in some ways more inte...
Focusing on Ethiopia, an empire off-center, this article argues against dominant narratives that lin...
This article aims to show that there is an entanglement between representations of the body and gend...
Debates over the origins of queerphobia in post-colonial African nations are legion. The conversatio...
textIn my dissertation, I argue that historians of Africa have overlooked the intersection between n...
Tracing recent bouts of globalised Mugabephobia to Robert Mugabes refusal to be neoimperially penetr...
This article examines the ways Egyptians monitored male sexuality in Ottoman and semi-colonial Egypt...
Sexual behaviors and their organization have been subjected to serious contestation since the 1980s ...
© The Author(s) (2019). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Studies...
This chapter considers sexualities and genders in Africa by exploring the relationship between preco...
This project addresses the settler colonial context of Rhodesia and postcolonial Zimbabwe, and inves...
In recent times, there have been emerging issues on the relevance of the feminist movement in sub-Sa...
Literature on sexuality and citizenship has demonstrated the myriad of ways that states use legislat...
Sexual violence finds its most brutal expression during armed conflicts. Across culture and time, s...
In this essay Katherine Franke examines two contemporary cites in which state efforts to eradicate t...
In this essay, Katherine Franke explores how dissent becomes a different, and in some ways more inte...
Focusing on Ethiopia, an empire off-center, this article argues against dominant narratives that lin...
This article aims to show that there is an entanglement between representations of the body and gend...
Debates over the origins of queerphobia in post-colonial African nations are legion. The conversatio...
textIn my dissertation, I argue that historians of Africa have overlooked the intersection between n...
Tracing recent bouts of globalised Mugabephobia to Robert Mugabes refusal to be neoimperially penetr...
This article examines the ways Egyptians monitored male sexuality in Ottoman and semi-colonial Egypt...
Sexual behaviors and their organization have been subjected to serious contestation since the 1980s ...
© The Author(s) (2019). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Studies...
This chapter considers sexualities and genders in Africa by exploring the relationship between preco...
This project addresses the settler colonial context of Rhodesia and postcolonial Zimbabwe, and inves...
In recent times, there have been emerging issues on the relevance of the feminist movement in sub-Sa...
Literature on sexuality and citizenship has demonstrated the myriad of ways that states use legislat...
Sexual violence finds its most brutal expression during armed conflicts. Across culture and time, s...