All Stories

  1. African Studies Keyword: Autoethnography
  2. Making Space for Embodied Voices, Diverse Bodies, and Multiple Genders in Nonconformist Friday Prayers: A Queer Feminist Ethnography of Progressive Muslims’ Performative Intercorporeality in North American Congregations
  3. Queering language socialization: Fostering inclusive Muslim interpretations through talk-in-interaction
  4. Becoming Muslims with a “Queer Voice”: Indexical Disjuncture in the Talk of LGBT Members of the Progressive Muslim Community
  5. When I Was a Swahili Woman: The Possibilities and Perils of “Going Native” in a Culture of Secrecy
  6. Secrets of a Swahili Marriage
  7. Beginnings and Endings: An Autoethnographic Account of Two Zanzibari Marriages
  8. REVIEW - Brennan, James R. Taifa: Making Nation and Race in Urban Tanzania. 292 pp. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 2012.
  9. Sabrina Billings, Language, globalization and the making of a Tanzanian beauty queen. Bristol: Multilingual Matters, 2014. Pp.viii, 222. Pb. $49.95.
  10. Discreet Talk about Supernatural Sodomy, Transgressive Gender Performance, and Male Same-Sex Desire in Zanzibar Town
  11. An Interdisciplinary Bibliography on Language, Gender, and Sexuality (2000–2011) Heiko Motschenbacher (2012) Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. pp. 294
  12. SWAHILI TALK ABOUT SUPERNATURAL SODOMY
  13. Strategies for taming a Swahili husband: Zanzibari women's talk about love in Islamic marriages
  14. How to Be a Good Muslim Wife: Women’s Performance of Islamic Authority during Swahili Weddings
  15. Zanzibari women’s discursive and sexual agency: Violating gendered speech prohibitions through talk about supernatural sex
  16. “I am Maasai”: Interpreting ethnic parody in Bongo Flava
  17. Keeping it real: reality and representation in Maasai Hip-Hop
  18. The Mother Tongue and Bilingual Hysteria: Translation Metaphors in Tsitsi Dangarembga's Nervous Conditions
  19. Focus on African Films by Françoise Pfaff
  20. On Framework