Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 August 2014
In recent years, ‘African homophobia’ has become a spectacle on the global stage, making Africa into a pre-modern site of anti-gay sentiment in need of Western intervention. This article suggests that ‘homophobia’ in post-2009 Malawi is an idiom through which multiple actors negotiate anxieties around governance and moral and economic dependency. I illustrate the material conditions that brought about social imaginaries of inclusion and exclusion – partially expressed through homophobic discourse – in Malawi. The article analyses the cascade of events that led to a moment of political and economic crisis in mid-2011, with special focus on how a 2009 sodomy case made homophobia available as a new genre of social commentary. Employing discourse analysis of newspaper articles, political speeches, the proceedings of a sodomy case, and discussions about men who have sex with men (MSM) as an HIV risk group, I show how African homophobia takes form via interested deployments of ‘cultural’ rhetoric toward competing ends. This article lends a comparative case study to a growing literature on the political and social functions of homophobia in sub-Saharan Africa.
Earlier versions of this article were presented at Brown University's Pembroke Seminar in 2012 and at the Northeast Workshops on Southern Africa (NEWSA) in 2013, where audiences provided critical feedback. I am grateful to Gift Trapence, the late Pierson Ntata, Joe Fischel, Poulomi Saha and Bianca Dahl for helpful suggestions and conversations. I also wish to thank the two anonymous reviewers for their comments.
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