In this Book

University of Minnesota Press
summary
There have been few book-length engagements with the question of sexuality in Africa, let alone African homosexuality. African Intimacies simultaneously responds to the public debate on the “Africanness” of homosexuality and interrogates the meaningfulness of the terms “sexuality” and “homosexuality” outside Euro-American discourse. Speculating on cultural practices interpreted by missionaries as sodomy and resistance to colonialism, Neville Hoad begins by analyzing the 1886 Bugandan martyrs incident—the execution of thirty men in the royal court. Then, in a series of close readings, he addresses questions of race, sex, and globalization in the 1965 Wole Soyinka novel The Interpreters, examines the emblematic 1998 Lambeth conference of Anglican bishops, considers the imperial legacy in depictions of the HIV/AIDS crisis, and reveals how South African writer Phaswane Mpe’s contemporary novel Welcome to Our Hillbrow problematizes notions of African identity and cosmopolitanism. Hoad’s assessment of the historical valence of homosexuality in Africa shows how the category has served a key role in a larger story, one in which sexuality has been made in line with a vision of white Western truth, limiting an understanding of intimacy that could imagine an African universalism. Neville Hoad is assistant professor of English at the University of Texas, Austin.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Copyright
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. vii-x
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  1. Introduction
  2. pp. xi-xxiv
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  1. 1. African Sodomy in the Missionary Position: Corporeal Intimacies and Signifying Regimes
  2. pp. 1-20
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  1. 2. Decolonizing the Body: The African and African American in Wole Soyinka’s The Interpreters
  2. pp. 21-47
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  1. 3. Neoliberalism and the Church: The World Conference of Anglican Bishops
  2. pp. 48-67
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  1. 4. White Man’s Burden, White Man’s Disease: Tracking Lesbian and Gay Human Rights
  2. pp. 68-89
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  1. 5. The Intellectual, the Archive, and the Pandemic: Thabo Mbeki’s AIDS Blues
  2. pp. 90-112
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  1. 6. An Elegy for African Cosmopolitanism: Phaswane Mpe’s Welcome to Our Hillbrow
  2. pp. 113-126
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  1. Notes
  2. pp. 127-164
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  1. Bibliography
  2. pp. 165-178
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 179-188
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