Dos importantes publicaciones sobre la comunidad LGBTQ acaban de ver su nacimiento en África: Queer Africa. New and Collected Fiction (Mayo 2013) y Queer African Reader (Abril, 2013). La noticia es todo un logro, dado que aún muchísimos países del continente añorado todavía permanecen en el total oscurantismo sexodiverso.
Cuando visité Ghana en mayo de este
año, pude percatarme de lo que
era verdaderamente temer por la vida debido a tu decisión sexual. Así
que estos dos libros que ya forman parte de mi colección (uno ya está en mis manos, y el otro
viene en camino) son ambos razones suficientes para celebrar la esperanza.
Queer African Reader
Sokari Ekine (Editor), Hakima Abbas (Editor)
As homophobia and transphobia
threaten to silence the voices of African lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender,
and intersex (LGBTI) people, this account is a testament to the resistance and
unrelenting power of these communities across Africa and its diaspora. It brings
together academic writings, political analysis, life testimonies, conversations,
and artistic works by Africans that engage with the struggle for LGBTI
liberation. The book aims to engage the audience from the perspective that
various traits of identity—such as gender, race, and class—interact to
contribute to social inequality. Including experiences from diverse African
contexts, this work breaks away from the homogenization of Africa as the
homophobic continent to highlight the complexities of LGBTI lives and
experiences through their own voices.
Queer Africa. New and Collected Fiction
by
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