South Africa and the dream of love to come

queer sexuality and the struggle for freedom

South Africa and the dream of love to come
Brenna M. Munro, Brenna M. Mun ...
Locate

My Reading Lists:

Create a new list

Check-In

×Close
Add an optional check-in date. Check-in dates are used to track yearly reading goals.
Today


Buy this book

Last edited by MARC Bot
December 20, 2022 | History

South Africa and the dream of love to come

queer sexuality and the struggle for freedom

" After apartheid, South Africa established a celebrated new political order that imagined the postcolonial nation as belonging equally to the descendents of indigenous people, colonizing settlers, transported slaves, indentured laborers, and immigrants. Its constitution, adopted in 1996, was the first in the world to include gays and lesbians as full citizens. Brenna M. Munro examines the stories that were told about sexuality, race, and nation throughout the struggle against apartheid in order to uncover how these narratives ultimately enabled gay people to become imaginable as fellow citizens. She also traces how the gay, lesbian, or bisexual person appeared as a stock character in the pageant of nationhood during the transition to democracy. In the process, she offers an alternative cultural history of South Africa.Munro asserts that the inclusion of gay people made South Africans feel "modern"--at least for a while. Being gay or being lesbian was reimagined in the 1990s as distinctly South African, but the "newness" that made these sexualities apt symbols for a transformed nation can also be understood as foreign and un-African. Indeed, a Western-style gay identity is often interpreted through the formula "gay equals modernity equals capitalism." As South Africa's reentrance into the global economy has failed to bring prosperity to the majority of its citizens, homophobic violence has been on the rise.Employing a wide array of texts--including prison memoirs, poetry, plays, television shows, photography, political speeches, and the postapartheid writings of Nobel Laureates Nadine Gordimer and J. M. Coetzee--Munro reports on how contemporary queer activists and artists are declining to remain ambassadors for the "rainbow nation" and refusing to become scapegoats for the perceived failures of liberation and liberalism. "--

Publish Date
Language
English

Buy this book

Book Details


Table of Contents

Machine generated contents note: ContentsIntroduction: The Politics of Stigma and the Making of Democracy
I. Fraternity and its Anxieties
1. Perverse Institutions, Heroic Genres: Anti-Apartheid Prison Writing
2. Gay Prison Revisions: Dramas of Conversion
3. Border Writing: Queering the Fraternity of Whiteness
II. Gender, Apartheid, and Imagined Spaces of Nation
4. City Sexualities: Richard Rive's Queer Nostalgia
5. Outside the Nation: Bessie Head's Disorientations
III. Writing the Rainbow Nation
6. Queer Family Romance: J.M. Coetzee and Nadine Gordimer
7. Queer Citizenship, Queer Exile: K. Sello Duiker and Zanele Muholi
Conclusion: Unrequited UtopiaAcknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index.

Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Published in
Minneapolis

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
820.9/968
Library of Congress
PR9359.6 .M86 2012, PR9359.6.M86 2012

The Physical Object

Pagination
p. cm.

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL25206213M
ISBN 13
9780816677689, 9780816677696
LCCN
2012002773
OCLC/WorldCat
759909921

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL16509754W

Community Reviews (0)

No community reviews have been submitted for this work.

Lists

This work does not appear on any lists.

History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON
December 20, 2022 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
August 3, 2020 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
July 17, 2019 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
February 15, 2012 Created by LC Bot import new book