This article is interested in popular and institutional or state responses to the representations of queerness offered in the films Inxeba/The Wound (South Africa, 2017) and Rafiki (Kenya, 2018). Aside from portraying the marked homophobia that continues to circulate on the African continent, the institutional and state responses to the films have overshadowed the positive popular reception which has characterised conversations around the films on social media and public spaces. This article shows how social media functions as animportant space of contestation for diverse issues relating to non-normative gender and sexual identities. As these films circulate in different spaces and are viewed by diverse audiences, they elicit equally ...
John Trengove’s film Inxeba (The Wound) was met with public outcry as it represented the sacred trad...
African sexualities are dynamic, multi-faceted and resilient. However, people with non-heterosexual ...
African cultures' views on intimacy and privacy have had an approach to sex, nudity, and eroticism t...
This thesis contests the notion that nonnormative sexualities are ‘un-African’ by examining a range ...
This article focuses on the controversy caused by the release of the film Inxeba (The Wound). Inxeba...
This article explores the complex and interwoven nature of the scored and traditional music fe...
Postmodernism ignited a rapid growth in oppositional cultures in the late 20th and early 21st centur...
Abstract: This article assesses some recurrent criticisms, based on respect for traditional culture,...
THE PORTRAYAL OF HOMOSEXUALITY IN INTERNATIONAL CINEMA The purpose of this ...
Abstract: In this paper, we discuss the multi-layered representations of masculinities as they appea...
This article aims to describe common cultural types of masculinity in the South African society and ...
The advocacy for gayism and lesbianism in Nigeria is informed by transnational cultural processes, t...
Contemporary African societies are regularly depicted as inherently homophobic cultural spaces by We...
The postcolonial government in Kenya has embarked on a sustained war against identity by banning loc...
Why think about queer cinema and world politics together? The scenario is familiar to those who foll...
John Trengove’s film Inxeba (The Wound) was met with public outcry as it represented the sacred trad...
African sexualities are dynamic, multi-faceted and resilient. However, people with non-heterosexual ...
African cultures' views on intimacy and privacy have had an approach to sex, nudity, and eroticism t...
This thesis contests the notion that nonnormative sexualities are ‘un-African’ by examining a range ...
This article focuses on the controversy caused by the release of the film Inxeba (The Wound). Inxeba...
This article explores the complex and interwoven nature of the scored and traditional music fe...
Postmodernism ignited a rapid growth in oppositional cultures in the late 20th and early 21st centur...
Abstract: This article assesses some recurrent criticisms, based on respect for traditional culture,...
THE PORTRAYAL OF HOMOSEXUALITY IN INTERNATIONAL CINEMA The purpose of this ...
Abstract: In this paper, we discuss the multi-layered representations of masculinities as they appea...
This article aims to describe common cultural types of masculinity in the South African society and ...
The advocacy for gayism and lesbianism in Nigeria is informed by transnational cultural processes, t...
Contemporary African societies are regularly depicted as inherently homophobic cultural spaces by We...
The postcolonial government in Kenya has embarked on a sustained war against identity by banning loc...
Why think about queer cinema and world politics together? The scenario is familiar to those who foll...
John Trengove’s film Inxeba (The Wound) was met with public outcry as it represented the sacred trad...
African sexualities are dynamic, multi-faceted and resilient. However, people with non-heterosexual ...
African cultures' views on intimacy and privacy have had an approach to sex, nudity, and eroticism t...