Journal of African Cultural Studies
ISSN: (Print) (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/cjac20
The Possibilities and Intimacies of Queer African
Screen Cultures
Lindsey Green-Simms & Z’étoile Imma
To cite this article: Lindsey Green-Simms & Z’étoile Imma (2021) The Possibilities and
Intimacies of Queer African Screen Cultures, Journal of African Cultural Studies, 33:1, 1-9, DOI:
10.1080/13696815.2020.1834360
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/13696815.2020.1834360
Published online: 14 Dec 2020.
Submit your article to this journal
View related articles
View Crossmark data
Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at
https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=cjac20
JOURNAL OF AFRICAN CULTURAL STUDIES
2021, VOL. 33, NO. 1, 1–9
https://doi.org/10.1080/13696815.2020.1834360
INTRODUCTION
The Possibilities and Intimacies of Queer African Screen
Cultures
Lindsey Green-Simmsa and Z’étoile Immab
a
Literature, American University, Washington, DC, United States; bTulane University, New Orleans, United
States
This special issue addresses the way that queer African intimacies are lived on screens and
through screens. When we sent our original call for papers, we invited authors to contribute articles not just on queer African feature films but also on screen media more broadly.
In essence, we wanted to think not just about the queer African movies that make it to the
big screen but also about how these films, alongside other forms of digital media, move
and circulate and resonate across multiple platforms, multiple screens, and multiple
stages. Since this is a special issue that focuses on screen cultures, we’d like to begin
with a brief discussion of screens themselves and their ability to cultivate forms of
queer intimacies and feelings of belonging. In the short documentary I am Sheriff
(2018), produced by Steps for the Future and directed by Teboho Edkina, a gender
non-conforming person from Lesotho named Sheriff Mothopeng travels to their hometown of Ha Elia and the surrounding areas of Makheka, exhibiting a film that itself features
Mothopeng discussing their gender identity with their grandmother, family, pastor, and
other community members. I am Sheriff shows Mothopeng screening their film in three
intimate and local settings: a community center, a school, and an open field. The scene
we want to focus on occurs about halfway through the film in the village where Sheriff
Mothopeng grew up.
In the middle of the afternoon, a Toyota pickup drives up a curved path in a small,
mountainous village in Lesotho. Then, the camera cuts to four people assembling a
movie screen in a large open field. They begin with the frame, trying to determine
where the poles go as children look on. Eventually, they succeed. The screen is erected
(see Figure 1). The truck is powered on again, the projector plugged into it by way of a
long, orange extension cord.
As night falls, a small crowd gathers to see the film. Mothopeng provides the introduction. ‘You all know who I am, right? I am Sheriff Mothopeng, I’m from this village. If you
want to address me call me Sheriff and not as a he or she, ok? Don’t be scared to ask me
anything after you have seen the film. I really want you to understand. If people from
where I was born understand me, I won’t need to explain myself to others.’ The film
Sheriff shows, called Why Are We Silent?, begins with an image of Mothopeng, wrapped
in a Basotho blanket, on a horse riding on the very road the pickup drove up earlier
that afternoon. In fact, the silhouette of the mountain behind the audience watching
CONTACT Lindsey Green-Simms
8007 United States
© 2020 International African Institute
[email protected]
Literature, American University, Washington, DC, 20016–
2
L. GREEN-SIMMS AND Z. IMMA
Figure 1. Still from film I am Sheriff.
the main film matches perfectly the profile of the mountain behind Mothopeng in the film
being shown to the audience. This brief moment of temporal and spatial synchronicity
highlights that the camera that filmed Why Are We Silent? and the camera that is
filming I am Sheriff are in almost the exact same spot. We, that is the audience of I am
Sheriff, watch a brief clip of the film with the audience in the village as Sheriff in the
film within the film explains their gender non-conformity to their grandmother. It is
one of the few moments of the film when the spectators of I am Sheriff and the spectators
in I am Sheriff share the viewing experience together. It is a moment of togetherness that
bridges the world outside the screen and on the screen.
But when the two films are no longer in sync and the camera turns back to the audience of Why Are We Silent? to capture their comments and reactions, the audience of I am
Sheriff is again asked to watch the affective encounter between Mothopeng and their
audience rather than participate in it. The first villager to speak is an older woman. ‘We
learnt a lot,’ she says of Sheriff Mothopeng’s film. She adds, ‘We didn’t understand your
situation until now. We didn’t know how to approach you. We thought your situation
was a family secret . . . I am happy and feel lucky to hear you explain . . . We are all
God’s children.’ Several other audience members reflect similar sentiments, using the
words ‘happy’ and ‘thankful’ several times. Many comment on the importance of the
pastor in the film who articulated a message of non-discrimination. When, in response
to Mothopeng’s declaration that they want to be called Sheriff, a woman in the audience
asks if she can continue to use Sheriff’s previous, female name, Sheriff tells the audience
that they find it offensive and offers the nickname, Sher, if Sheriff is too difficult. The
woman asking the question smiles and says she’ll practice. The moment remains light,
with much giggling and warmth passing between the two. Even as Mothopeng also
insists, ‘this is not a joke,’ that they do not want to be referred to as a girl, they add
‘I still love you all though.’ And the audience replies, ‘We love you too.’ They then close
the screening with a prayer.
JOURNAL OF AFRICAN CULTURAL STUDIES
3
Queer cinema from Africa is often hailed as modeling an important form of visual activism, ‘one that makes hidden histories become visible’ (Hawley 2018, 4). Indeed, the aforementioned shot of Sheriff Mothopeng riding a horse wrapped in a Basotho blanket serves
to powerfully disavow state-driven discourses that argue LGBTQ identities in Africa run
counter to traditional African cultures. By making visible how Mothopeng is physically, linguistically, and culturally at home and welcome in the small town of Ha Elia and in the
Lesotho nation more broadly, despite the slight and subtly rendered forms of gender misrecognition and potential misunderstandings that their film screening project seeks to
offset, I am Sheriff articulates a queer politics of belonging over an explicit call for dissident confrontation. Enacting ‘belonging as a thick concept which includes affective
and cultural’ registers (Mikki van Zyl cited in Livermon 2012, 299), as a figure/character
in the double documentaries, Mothopeng claims their community as a site of belonging,
and espouses and embodies an active intimacy born of deep listening, honest engagement, humor, and vulnerability. Both films offer both audiences an opportunity to
enter and witness belonging as contingent and mutual as Mothopeng declares, ‘If
people from where I was born understand, I won’t need to explain myself to others.’ In
I am Sheriff the affective terrain of desire is one of longing to be understood, seen, and
heard and ultimately the film suggests that desire is collectively fulfilled and fulfilling.
In many ways, Sheriff Mothopeng, an LGBTQ activist based in Cape Town, and U.S. –
born and Lesotho-raised director Teboho Edkins, follow in the wake of African filmmakers
who have come before them. The great Senegalese filmmaker Ousmane Sembène, for
instance, famously referred to cinema as a night school for the working class and
toured the country with make-shift screens that looked similar to Mothopeng’s, waiting
until nightfall to show them to all who gathered. Likewise, Sembène made his films in
indigenous languages so that they could be understood by local audiences and then
asked people to remain after the film for discussion. And, even before Sembène, colonial
film units in many British colonies toured the countryside with educational documentaries, though these were often made in a very paternalistic and developmentalist
modes. And yet despite being reminiscent of this early mode of pedagogical African
filmmaking, I am Sheriff does more than just aim to educate. Though the goal of Why
Are We Silent? is to help local audiences understand trans and gender non-conforming
people like Mothopeng, I am Sheriff as a whole is much less didactic. The two films, in
other words, do not have the same effect nor do they affect their audiences in the
same way. Whereas Why Are We Silent?, which we see just a few short scenes from,
seems to be focused on explaining gender diversity, nonconformity, and queerness,
I am Sheriff spends much more time on the reaction of the Lesotho viewers. The focus,
then, is not the educational film itself, but rather its affective aftermaths.
And what these aftermaths are is precisely what interests us in this special issue: the
pleasures and possibilities opened up by different screen media and by the very presence
of screens themselves. In I am Sheriff, the screen in question is a large screen that needs to
be constructed and deconstructed and physically carried to different places where
different and overlapping communities gather. It is a mobile screen, though not the
type of mobile screens we most often think of in today’s digital world. But what the
screen in I am Sheriff affords is a series of human interactions and embodied encounters
centered around African queerness. In the scene discussed above, the screen and the
screening make possible expressions of mutual understanding, gratitude, and love. In
4
L. GREEN-SIMMS AND Z. IMMA
an earlier scene at a girls school, Sheriff, who in Why Are We Silent makes it clear that their
sexual relationships have all been with women, is asked whether they have ever fantasized about sleeping with men. Another student asks a question about vibrators. The
school girls make it clear that they have not been privy to, or participants in, many
open conversations about sex, lust, or desire. What I am Sheriff does, like many of the
queer African films and videos discussed in this special issue, is not just assert the existence of African queerness but also opens up space for an entire range of desires, pleasures, connections, and intimacies to be explored.
Audiences of I am Sheriff, especially those activists and scholars so used to human
rights-inflected documentaries that represent African queer lives as structured overwhelmingly by the violence of homophobia, erasure, surveillance, hate crime, health disparity,
and poverty, may be surprised and perhaps even unsettled with how the film does not
take up these issues. While the necessity to explain oneself and one’s gender identity
suggests difficulty, difference, and isolation, whatever trauma Mothopeng may have
experienced as a gender non-conforming person is not taken up by the film. Instead,
speaking who they are to multiple communities, near and far, in I am Sheriff, Mothopeng
opens up intimacy as a possibility and counts on love.
Many of films studied in this special issue locate intimacy in the realms of the personal,
everyday, ordinary, and the proximate to glean how intimacy might inspire, transform,
and empower African queer subjectivities. The political, aesthetic, and representational
possibilities engendered by loving intimacies, however fragile and sometimes failed,
which emerge from quotidian African queer lives on screen are at the heart of our critical
imperative here. And yet in African, postcolonial, and critical race studies, intimacy has
often featured quite differently as scholars have scrutinized how cultures of white supremacy, inequality, and domination are constituted through the violence of attachment and
the erotics of possession. For example, in On the Postcolony, Achille Mbembe employs the
phrase ‘the intimacy of tyranny’ to account for how the ruler and the ruled share the same
episteme in the postcolony and stresses the complicity of the citizen within the erotic
rituals and practices of authoritarian rule (Mbembe 2001, 133). From Laura Stoler (2010)
to Sharon Holland (2012), intimacy has been analyzed as a central mechanism for the subjection of racialized bodies. Patricia McFadden (2003) has importantly pushed back
against the ways that during the AIDS epidemic the intimate and erotic lives of African
people had been singularized around disease and pathological unsafe sexual behavior.
In what some LGBTQ activists and scholars have argued is an attempt to distance nonnormative sexualities from the trauma of HIV/AIDS stigma and death, representations of
queer intimacy are increasingly under pressure to surface in terms of public, respectable,
and neoliberal forms of legibility: couple formation, marriage, adoption rights, shared
material resources, social and economic mobility, etc. To recenter intimacy in the realm
of the personal, affective, and the small-scale relational at the same time that homonationalist, bio- and necropolitical assemblages continue to govern queer life, especially
those Black and African queer lives structured as disposable, may reek of apolitical escapism. Furthermore, as Senayon Olaoluwa argues, recent debates about homosexuality in
Africa have often been articulated through and acted to reestablish ‘discourses of intimacy’ which work to overdetermine queer bodies within the troublesome binaries of
gender and sex (Olaoluwa 2018, 24). Still Danai Mupotsa and Moshibudi Motimele’s
recently put-forward definition of intimacy as ‘a way of organizing the world; [which]
JOURNAL OF AFRICAN CULTURAL STUDIES
5
alerts us to the forms of relation in our public and private lives, and shapes the ways we
interact with forces of power’ (Motimele and Mupotsa 2020) highlights how both the
imprint of power and personal relation co-constitutively map the geographies of dissident
sexual identities and practices.
Keeping these tensions and terminologies in mind, standing from within the interdisciplinary, increasingly trendy, and unevenly transnational contours of the field of African
queer studies, we aim to situate intimacy as a critical site and mode of cultural production.
Attending to a study of intimacy beyond its violent manifestations in the context of
African queer representations and realities, allows for an exploration of the more
mundane and everyday forms of engagement between persons, bodies, and spaces
not entirely mediated by normative regimes. More specifically, for African queer screen
cultures, we follow intimacy as a crucial imaginary where desire, in its broadest sense,
might offer us a new visual language, one that speaks in terms less invested in explicit
narratives of resistance and domination, but instead enacts visions of interaction,
touch, and longing which anticipate African queerness as possibility and belonging.
While African queer screen cultures continue to serve as strategic tools for LGBTQ representational politics on the continent, many of these images and stories also reflect
African queer intimacies at the interstices, subverting and at times contradicting the
mainstreaming of Western constructs of sexual identity. As such, without vacating
power or the necessity of resistance, many of the authors in this special issue grapple
with and study the space of possibility that rests in what Keguro Macharia describes as
intimacy’s ‘proximity and contact, pleasure and irritation’ (Macharia 2019, 5). The films
and videos discussed in this special issue reflect just a fraction of queer screen content
being produced on the African continent, yet brought together, they highlight how
queer African films and videos might relocate intimacy in the energetic terrains of embodiment, vulnerable enactments of tenderness, and quiet performances of mutual care that
might seem small in light of the visibility politics and neoliberal lure of bright-light recognition but nonetheless push us to see differently.
The first four articles in this issue examine queer African films that circulate internationally and might be classified as art or festival films. Whereas I am Sheriff documents intergenerational exchange and community-centered belonging as intimacy, many of the
films discussed here affirm sexual desire, romantic love, and sensuality as primary sites
of intimacy, affirmations that have in many instances resulted in local censorship or backlash even as the films were globally successful. We begin the issue with Kwame Edwin
Otu’s discussion of Mohamed Camara’s 1997 Guinean film Dakan, a film that follows
the story of two teenage boys, Sori and Manga, who fall in love, are separated by their
families, but eventually set off to make a life together. Dakan, the first West African celluloid film to feature same-sex intimacy, was a film that was, in many ways, ahead of its time.
Indeed, its opening scene, which consists of Sori and Manga making out in the intimate
space of Sori’s red convertible car, was the first of its kind outside of South Africa, and for
nearly a decade, Dakan was one of the only African films to suggest that it was possible for
two people of the same sex to fall in love and to have sustained intimacy. But Otu insists
that Dakan not be read as a simple teleological mapping of African progress where the
continent emerges from a state of intolerance to a state of tolerance. Rather, he reads
‘Dakan as a visual intervention that undermines the trope of Africa as a site in need of
critique, by reimagining Africa instead as a site that furnishes critique.’ Otu’s analysis of
6
L. GREEN-SIMMS AND Z. IMMA
the film is therefore just as much about the way that the film depicts the failure of heteronormative institutions like marriage, the nuclear family, and schools as it is about the way
that the film opens space for the homoerotic/queer possibilities that emerge at sites
where these heteroerotic norms fail. Building on the work of Ugandan scholar and activist
Stella Nyanzi, Otu articulates the way that Dakan expresses an afro-queer future that
‘queers “queer Africa” through characters that contest the stifling rules, regulations,
and innuendos animating the heteronormative cultural terrain that is their backdrop.’
The second article, Lwando Scott’s reading of John Trengove’s South African film
Inxeba (2017) does not, as Otu’s article does, focus on heterosexual failure, but it does
rely heavily on thinking through the critical possibilities that are opened up by locating
same-sex intimacy within traditional African spaces. Inxeba is a complex film set in the
mountains of the Eastern Cape during several weeks of male initiation rites. Two of the
caregivers, Xolani and Vija, have, for years, secretly engaged in an intimate affair during
the initiation season. But when Xolani is placed in charge of Kwanda, a brash, queer
initiate who challenges many presumptions of masculinity, his relationship with Vija
too is challenged. What Scott suggests in his reading of Inxeba is that the film challenges
dominant forms of Xhosa masculinity and shows audiences how ‘black men’s bodies
relate to each other in ways that are not normally seen, and in ways that force the
viewer to challenge their ideas of what exactly black bodies are supposed to be like
and to do.’ In this way, Scott positions Inxeba against narratives of failure but specifically
those that see queerness as a failure of Xhosa masculinity. In the 20 years between Dakan
and Inxeba a handful of other queer African art films – Karmen Gei, The World Unseen,
Stories of Our Lives – have also challenged notions that queerness is un-African by
showing the multiple ways that same-sex intimacies do indeed exist, but what makes
Inxeba so provocative for Scott – and what made the film so controversial in South
Africa – is that Inxeba shows that they ‘exist deep in the most sacred of Xhosa cultural
spaces.’ Indeed much like I am Sheriff, Inxeba articulates a politics in which African communities can be imagined as sites for queer belonging even though in Trengove’s film,
queer intimacy is not, at the end of the day, sustained.
In her article on Wanuri Kahiu’s critically acclaimed narrative feature film Rafiki (2018),
which tells the story of two young women in Nairobi who fall in love, Lyn Johnstone
echoes many of the claims about queer possibility that Otu and Scott make. But Johnstone pays specific attention to the potentialities of what Kahiu calls Afro-bubblegum
filmmaking, a direct response to the erasures of play, pleasure, and joy in African lives
on screen. If I am Sheriff’s mobile screens act as a house of mirrors for its audiences, in
Rafiki the screen acts as a prism reflecting African queer intimacy and pleasure for an
entangled set of Nairobi-based, Kenyan, African, and Western markets and audiences.
Unlike Inxeba, which despite its provocative portrayal of queer Xhosa intimacy, ends by
cutting off the possibilities of queer joy, Kahiu’s love story offers us new visions of
pink-hued and Black queer sustained intimacy beyond the stark. Still, Kahiu’s film does
not present a utopic vision as the girls are made victim to homophobic violence in a distressing scene of mob cruelty that threatens their lives, their love, and Kahiu’s bubble
making endeavor. In Rafiki, however, the violence is not the finale and the possibilities
engendered by their shared intimacy, including a viable happy ending, remain, intact.
As Johnstone argues, ‘Rafiki stands out as exemplary in the way in which it not only
creates the impression of a happy ending for its queer protagonists, but, through the
JOURNAL OF AFRICAN CULTURAL STUDIES
7
visual affirmation of this ending, offers a kernel of hope for queer Kenyans and provides
them with a glimpse of what a queer Kenyan future could be.’
Our fourth article on queer African art films moves away from a focus on Sub-Saharan
films and focuses instead on North Africa. In his article on three Maghrebian films, Nadia El
Fani’s Bedwin Hacker (2003), Raja Amari’s Al Dowaha (Buried Secrets) (2009) and Abdellah
Taïa’s L’Armée du Salut (The Salvation Army) (2013), Gibson Ncube suggests that unlike
Sub-Saharan African films, which often contain explicitly intimate scenes, North African
films communicate queerness in more silent, muted, and secret ways. Therefore, while
Dakan, Inxeba, and Rafiki might be categorized as what Otu calls visual interventions,
the films Ncube discusses present queer subjects who ‘negotiate and explore, often in
secrecy and privacy, the sensual potentials of their bodies.’ In this way, the physical
screen is not the main way that queer intimacies and pleasures are made visible in Maghrebian queer cinema. Rather, Ncube focuses on the way that skin itself becomes a type of
screen or surface on which queer desires and intimacies are projected. Ncube focuses not
on what is visualized or represented on the movie screen but ‘on the murky areas and
what remains unsaid, unrepresented and unscreened.’ And yet despite the different aesthetic gestures in Maghrebian queer cinema, Ncube, like Otu, Scott, and Johnstone,
focuses on ‘the intimate process of space-making’ and the way the films can create knowledge and openings to challenge racialised/gendered/sexual norms.
Whereas the first four articles focus on queer African art films made on celluloid and
screened at festivals and art-house theaters across the globe our last two articles
discuss films and videos that appear on the small screen and that circulate mainly
through internet sites like YouTube. For instance, in a discussion of queer African
refugee stories, AB Brown reads the documentary Getting Out, a 2011 film produced by
the Uganda-based Refugee Law Project, alongside the web-based Seeking Asylum series
produced by the queer African digital storytelling project None on Record. While
Brown describes Getting Out as a type of film that reproduces nationalist asylum logics
and identitarian gay rights politics, they see the Seeking Asylum series as offering ‘aesthetic explorations of intimacy, distortion, humor, intersubjectivity and mundanity’ that
allow for creativity beyond those structures. Seeking Asylum consists of four short films,
each approximately five minutes in length, that are available on YouTube as well as on
None on Record’s own website. Therefore, Brown suggests, the films engage audiences
in a way that NGO documentaries or films shown at international film festivals might
not. The Seeking Asylum films, Brown writes, ‘may be encountered accidentally, almost
anywhere in the world, as a series or individually, and in whatever order and with whatever repetition the viewer chooses. As such, they become experiential episodes that
expose us to these individuals’ stories without directing a specific response from their
viewer or even a specific viewership in the first place.’ In this way, Brown’s article offers
not just a reflection on the genre of queer African refugee stories, which often project
queer African subjects as monolithically victimized, but also on ways in which screen
media can queer and disrupt these representations by embracing alternate aesthetic
practices as well as alternate distribution platforms.
Likewise, in our final article on South African video logs, or vlogs, Grant Andrews underscores the ways in which YouTube is a platform that allows for a range of queer South
Africans, many from marginalized communities, to become their own content creators
and to celebrate and document their lives and struggles in the way that they see fit.
8
L. GREEN-SIMMS AND Z. IMMA
Andrews reminds us that, despite South Africa’s progressive constitution, queer screen
media in the country is still relatively limited and often focused on men, and in particular,
white, Afrikaans-speaking men. By contrast, the queer vloggers that Andrews discusses
represent a diverse group of queer African subjects who depict their own lived experiences in the spaces that they inhabit. In this way, Andrews suggests that viewers anywhere in the world can witness on their smartphones or computers or other mobile
devices ‘the possibilities of freedom, love and self-acceptance which the vloggers
present on screens’ alongside ‘the anxieties, uncertainties and feelings of insecurity
that are part of vloggers’ lives.’ Andrews himself documents the very complex ways
that these vloggers use entertainment, personal narrative, and documentary elements
to engage with questions of race, sexuality, intimacy, and activism in contemporary
South Africa. Moreover, he examines how vloggers ‘appeal to authentic connection
despite the performative nature of YouTube videos and the physical distance which
might exist between users.’ Therefore, like the large screen in I am Sheriff, the small
screens Andrews discusses create moments of belonging and shared intimacy that
bridge the world outside the screen and on the screen.
We end this special issue with a conversation between Lindsey Green-Simms, Jude
Dibia, and Olumide Makanjuola about the 2019 cinematic adaptation of Dibia’s 2005
novel Walking with Shadows, the first West African novel to feature a gay protagonist,
that Makanjuola helped produced. The conversation addresses many of the topics
covered by other articles in this special issue – the relationship between art and activism,
the way cinema can create spaces and open possibilities for conversation, the ways queer
films might perform their resistance in quiet and subtle ways. But the conversation also
focuses on some of the more logistical elements of queer African filmmaking: How
does one find a director or funding? What types of stories might engage a homophobic
audience? What types of stories do queer people want to see and tell? What types of strategies are necessary to get a queer film screened in a country that has recently codified
harsh penalties against homosexuality? In many ways, these logistical concerns are in
the background of several of the special issue articles that touch on questions of censorship, transgression, and the risks and potentialities of broaching taboo subjects or
performing one’s identity in a way that defies expectations. But by bringing these practical matters to the foreground in this final conversation, we hope to highlight how the
forms of intimacies and feelings of belonging that queer African screen media cultivates
are deeply entangled with the unique challenges and pleasures of queer life in each of the
particular countries discussed.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
References
Edkins, Teboho (director). 2018. I am Sheriff. Steps International.
Hawley, John C. 2018. “Desiring Africans: An Introduction.” African Literature Today 36: 1–6.
Holland, Sharon. 2012. The Erotic Life of Racism. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Livermon, X. 2012. “Queer(y)ing Freedom: Black Queer Visibilities in Postapartheid South Africa.”
GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 18 (2): 297–323.
JOURNAL OF AFRICAN CULTURAL STUDIES
9
Macharia, Keguro. 2019. Frottage: Frictions of Intimacy Across the Black Diaspora. New York, NY:
New York University Press.
Mbembe, Achille. 2001. On the Postcolony. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
McFadden, Patricia. 2003. “Sexual Pleasure as Feminist Choice.” Feminist Africa 2: 50–60.
Motimele, Moshibudi, and Danai Mupotsa. “CFP Covid-19: The Intimacies of Pandemics.” Agenda.
Agenda Feminist Media. Aug 17, 2020. http://www.agenda.org.za/3864-2/.
Olaoluwa, Senayon. 2018. “The Human and the Non-Human: African Sexuality Debate and
Symbolisms of Transgression.” In Queer in Africa: LGBTQI Identities, Citizenship, and Activism,
edited by Matebeni Zethu, Surya Munro, and Vasu Reddy, 20–40. London: Routledge.
Stoler, Laura A. 2010. Carnal Knowledge and Imperial Power Race and the Intimate in Colonial Rule.
Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.