All Stories

  1. Skin and Silence in Selected Maghrebian Queer Films
  2. Eternal mothers, whores or witches: The oddities of being a woman in politics in Zimbabwe
  3. Self-Imposed Exile, Marginality, and Homosexuality in the Novels of Abdellah Taïa, Rachid O., and Eyet-Chékib Djaziri
  4. Women and North African Literatures
  5. ‘Guilty Pleasures’, ‘Forbidden Fruits’ and ‘Brave Confusion’: Queer Love in the Music and Videos of South African Singers Toya Delazy and Nakhane Touré
  6. Of dirt, disinfection and purgation: Discursive construction of state violence in selected contemporary Zimbabwean literature
  7. Renegotiating the Marginality of the Maghreb in Queer African Studies
  8. Compelled to Perform in the ‘Oppressor’s’ Language? Ndebele Performing Artists and Zimbabwe’s Shona-Centric Habitus
  9. Outspoken Cynics? Rethinking the Social Consciousness of Rap and Hip-Hop Music in Zimbabwe
  10. Knowledge, Power and Being: Literature and the Creation of an Archive of “Marginal” Sexualities in the Maghreb
  11. SOUTH AFRICA AND THE DREAM OF LOVE TO COME: QUEER SEXUALITY AND THE STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM.
  12. Being a closeted queer in Tendai Huchu's The Hairdresser of Harare
  13. (Re)membering the nation’s “forgotten” past: Portrayals of Gukurahundi in Zimbabwean literature
  14. Mugabe’s fall from grace: satire and fictional narratives as silent forms of resistance in/on Zimbabwe
  15. To be black, Christian and gay: Nakhane Touré’sBrave Confusion
  16. Sexual/textual politics: rethinking gender and sexuality in gay Moroccan literature
  17. ‘Dieu et le sexe. Le pur et l’impur’: Concilier l’Islam et l’homosexualité chez Rachid O. et Abdellah Taïa
  18. A Bantu in My Bathroom: Debating Race, Sexuality, and Other Uncomfortable South African Topics
  19. “The festering finger?” Reimagining Minority Sexuality in Tendai Huchu'sThe Hairdresser of Harareand Abdellah Taïa'sUne Mélancolie Arabe
  20. Portrait of Dr. Ronald Gibson