Knowing women : same-sex intimacy, gender, and identity in postcolonial Ghana / Serena Owusua Dankwa, Universität Bern, Switzerland .
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781108495905
- 9781108811026
- 306.76/6309667 23
- HQ75.6 G4 D36 2021
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Carlos P. Romulo Library | HQ 75.6 G4 D36 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available |
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HQ 57 C33 2005 Special Issues on Sexuality Education | HQ 58.7 P37 2001 Multicultural behavior and global business environments / | HQ 72 P6 1995 Brave little women : a study on incest / | HQ 75.6 G4 D36 2021 Knowing women : same-sex intimacy, gender, and identity in postcolonial Ghana / | HQ 175.7 F5 1995 Filipino women : a union catalog. | HQ 184 C33 2000 Prostitution: who gains from the system/ | HQ 245 R29 2004 Report of the Expert Group Meeting on Protecting Victims of International Trafficking, 11-12 November 2004 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"Knowing Women is an ethnography on friendship, same-sex desire, and intimacy among urban, working-class women in southern Ghana who engage in erotic relationships with each other. The intersectional analysis of these women's life narratives and world views situates them in relation to contemporary political, economic, and social developments affecting Ghana and other African societies in a postcolonial world. Prominent among these are the anti-gay policies and rhetoric and the pro-gay activism of local and international LGBTIQ advocacy organizations. Paying close attention to the women's own practices of self-reference, S. O. Dankwa refers to them as "knowing women" in a way that both distinguishes them from, and relates them to such categories as lesbian or supi a Ghanaian term for female friend(ship). In so doing it critically refutes both the anti-gay claim that homosexuality is "un-African" and the universalizing claim that queer identity categories exist in and can be translated between all languages and cultures. The book contributes to the burgeoning field of global queer studies in which both women and Africa have been largely underrepresented. In addition to engaging feminist, queer, Africanist and postcolonial theories of gender and sexuality, it responds to anthropological theories of kinship and gift-exchange"-- Provided by publisher.
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