Sexual identity has emerged into the national discourse of
post-apartheid South Africa, bringing the subject of rights and the
question of gender relations and cultural authenticity into the
focus of the nation state's politics. This book is a fascinating
reflection on the effects of these discourses on non-normative
modes of sexuality and intimacy and on the country more generally.
While in 1996, South Africa became the first country in the world
that explicitly incorporated lesbian and gay rights within a Bill
of Rights, much of the country has continued to see homosexuality
as un-African. Henriette Gunkel examines how colonialism and
apartheid have historically shaped constructions of gender and
sexuality and how these concepts have not only been re-introduced
and shaped by understandings of homosexuality as un-African but
also by the post-apartheid constitution and continued discourse
within the nation.
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