Artikel
"It's a silent trade" -female same-sex intimacies in post-colonial Ghana
Verfasst von:
Dankwa, Serena Owosua
in:
Nora
Oslo:
2009
,
192-205 S.
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Einrichtung: | Ariadne | Wien |
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Verfasst von: | Dankwa, Serena Owosua |
In: | Nora |
Jahr: | 2009 |
Sprache: | Nicht einzuordnen |
Beschreibung: | |
While in many places same-sex cultures revolve around politically charged subcultural understandings, this paper explores conceptualizations of female same-sex desire beyond constructions of lesbian identity. It looks at a set of practices forged by women who are involved in intimate same-sex relationships in southern Ghana and examines how their self-understandings resist and intersect with the derogatory media representations that frame them. A key term to these representations is the term supi. It implies a close friendship between two adolescent girls, whether or not their relationship has a sexual dimension. In spite of rising tides of homophobia that impact such female intimacies, two factors still allow for the creation of niches for same-sex intimacy: first, southern Ghanaian cultures draw on norms of verbal indirection and discretion, which allow for the concealment of non-normative sexual conduct. Secondly, homosocial spaces of intimacy provide an environment in which female same-sex bonds are expressed through a language of allusion rather than a specialist, subcultural vocabulary. Erotic context is formed through practice and performance and is not discursively named or understood as a social identity. Rather, these understandings of female same-sex passions revolve around the notion of secrecy and are based on tacit but vibrant forms of knowledge. | |
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