Ol'Things Considered
This month, we return with a new series titled "Sexualities, Gender & Violence in Africa". In this Episode, we consider how South African Zulu LGBTQI people navigate customary isiZulu marriages in the face of longstanding homophobia in their communities. This episode contests the rift typically drawn between African cultures and queerness as incompatible. This conversation is in part a critical response to the recent homophobic outrage by Ngizwe Mchunu against a gay couple getting married, with one wearing imvunulo (Zulu traditional attire). In this episode, Zamo shares their thoughts on Isintu (the Zulu way of life) as constantly negotiated, plastic and malleable to situation, time and place. Taking Isintu to be negotiated opens the possibility of undoing the estrangement of African queer people from their cultural communities. I'm joined by Zamokuhle Zulu, a scholar-activist based at the Hub for Decolonial Feminist Psychologies in Africa, at the University of Cape Town. Zamo's work looks at the ways in which Isintu sakwa Zulu (The Zulu way of life) can be a conduit to securing the well-being of people with different sexualities and genders in South Africa. Our discussion in this episode is informed by Zamo's ethnographic research into how same-sex couples navigated Zulu customary marriages. If you like what you see, please like and subscribe to this channel! Ol'Things Considered promises to deliver more intellectually stimulating and sometimes provocative conversations centring the work of scholars in the Global South! To stay tuned to our next podcast series, please follow and subscribe to the podcast on these platforms!Instagram: @olthingsconsideredSpotify: OlthingsconsideredApple Podcast: Ol'Things ConsideredTiktok: @olthingsconsideredEnjoy and feel free to share your thoughts on this conversation below!
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