Details

Queer Visibilities


Queer Visibilities

Space, Identity and Interaction in Cape Town
RGS-IBG Book Series, Band 76 1. Aufl.

von: Andrew Tucker

25,99 €

Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 22.07.2011
ISBN/EAN: 9781444399776
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 256

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Beschreibungen

<p><b>Combining current theory and original fieldwork, <i>Queer Visibilities</i> explores the gap between liberal South African law and the reality for groups of queer men living in Cape Town.</b></p> <ul> <li>Explores the interface between queer sexuality, race, and urban space to show links between groups of queer men</li> <li>Focuses on three main 'population groups' in Cape Town—white, coloured, and black Africans</li> <li>Discusses how HIV remains a key issue for queer men in South Africa</li> <li>Utilizes new research data—the first comprehensive cross-community study of queer identities in South Africa</li> </ul>
List of Figures and Tables. <p>Series Editors' Preface.</p> <p>Acknowledgements.</p> <p>1 Queer Visibilities in Cape Town.</p> <p><b>Part I Visibilities.</b></p> <p>2 Legacies and Visibilities among White Queer Men.</p> <p>3 Coloured Visibilities and the Raced Nature of Heteronormative Space.</p> <p>4 How to be a Queer Xhosa Man in the Cape Town Townships.</p> <p><b>Part II Interactions.</b></p> <p>5 Social Invisibilities.</p> <p>6 Political Invisibilities (and Visibilities).</p> <p>7 The Costs of Invisibility.</p> <p>Notes.</p> <p>Bibliography.</p> <p>Index.</p>
"This attention to the materiality of the city, as well as the relational complexities of historical and contemporary interactions between queer men from different racialised backgrounds is one of the major strengths of this book. Queer Visibilities offers valuable lessons for sexual geographers and urban geographers alike and deserves to be widely read." (Area, 2011) <p>"Tucker successfully resists closing down debate, carefully qualifying his points without qualifying them out of existence. His assessments are many, detailed and well substantiated by interview quotations. One is unable to comprehensively review the many valuable insights he brings here. Read the book." (<i>Book Southern Africa</i>, September 2010)"<i>Queer Visibilities</i> is a much-needed intervention in the geographies of sexualities. Drawing upon extensive ethnographic and archival work, it provides a theoretically sophisticated examination of the interconnected politics of class and race in the production of sexualised space within contemporary Cape Town."<br /> –<b>Jon Binnie,</b> Manchester Metropolitan University</p> <p>"How can we understand the closet if we do not understand our visibilities? Tucker has provided an impressive study driven by intellectual parley between geography, queer theory, postcolonial and development studies. This book adds to the already powerful queer geographies on a fascinating place as well as to debates around queer globalisations."<br /> –<b>Michael Brown,</b> University of Washington</p>
<b>Andrew Tucker</b> lectures at the Department of Geography, University of Cambridge. He earned his PhD from the department and has also held an Economic and Social Research Council of the UK Postdoctoral Research Fellowship there. He has spent several extended periods of time in South Africa for research.
<i>Queer Visibilities</i> explores the gap between liberal South African law and the more dangerous reality for groups of queer men living in Cape Town. By examining the lives of queer men among the three major ‘race’ groups in Cape Town – whites, coloureds and black Africans – this illuminating new study shows how changes in South African law remain marginal to vast numbers of the city’s queers. The text also explores the inextricable links between the regulation and expression of queer sexualities and the histories of racial classification in the country. It argues that Western notions of ‘the closet’ fail to account for important distinctions between men who at times inhabit vastly different social worlds. Such distinctions, however, must be uncovered if the needs and wishes of diverse communities are to be understood. <i>Queer Visibilities</i> combines the most up-to-date theoretical arguments with extensive new field research to shed light on some important failures of the New South Africa – including the many hardships faced by black African queer men in the Cape Town townships and a ‘forgotten HIV epidemic’ caused by lingering homophobia and ignorance. <p>This important new book contributes valuable insights into the study of human sexuality and reveals how sexual discrimination remains a challenge that must be overcome for the true spirit of reconciliation to be realised in South African society.</p>

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