TY - JOUR
T1 - Morality plays and money matters
T2 - towards a situated understanding of the politics of homosexuality in Uganda
AU - Sadgrove, Joanna
AU - Vanderbeck, Robert M.
AU - Andersson, Johan
AU - Valentine, Gill
AU - Ward, Kevin
PY - 2012/3
Y1 - 2012/3
N2 - Since the drafting of Uganda's anti-homosexuality bill in 2009 considerable attention has been paid both in Uganda and across the African continent to the political and social significance of homosexual behaviour and identity. However, current debates have not adequately explained how and why anti-homosexual rhetoric has been able to gain such popular purchase within Uganda. In order to move beyond reductive representations of an innate African homophobia, we argue that it is necessary to recognise the deep imbrication of sexuality, family life, procreation and material exchange in Uganda, as well as the ways in which elite actors (including government officials, the media and religious leaders) are able to manipulate social anxieties to further particular ends. We employ a discourse analysis of reporting in the state-owned newspaper New Vision, first considering how the issue of homosexuality has been represented in relation to wider discourses regarding threats to public morality and national sovereignty. Then, through fieldwork undertaken in Uganda in 2009 we explore three key themes that offer deeper insights into the seeming resonance of this popular rhetoric about homosexuality: constructions of the family, the nature of societal morality, and understandings about reciprocity and material exchange in contemporary Ugandan society.
AB - Since the drafting of Uganda's anti-homosexuality bill in 2009 considerable attention has been paid both in Uganda and across the African continent to the political and social significance of homosexual behaviour and identity. However, current debates have not adequately explained how and why anti-homosexual rhetoric has been able to gain such popular purchase within Uganda. In order to move beyond reductive representations of an innate African homophobia, we argue that it is necessary to recognise the deep imbrication of sexuality, family life, procreation and material exchange in Uganda, as well as the ways in which elite actors (including government officials, the media and religious leaders) are able to manipulate social anxieties to further particular ends. We employ a discourse analysis of reporting in the state-owned newspaper New Vision, first considering how the issue of homosexuality has been represented in relation to wider discourses regarding threats to public morality and national sovereignty. Then, through fieldwork undertaken in Uganda in 2009 we explore three key themes that offer deeper insights into the seeming resonance of this popular rhetoric about homosexuality: constructions of the family, the nature of societal morality, and understandings about reciprocity and material exchange in contemporary Ugandan society.
KW - HUMAN-RIGHTS
KW - GAY
KW - SEXUALITY
U2 - 10.1017/S0022278X11000620
DO - 10.1017/S0022278X11000620
M3 - Article
SN - 0022-278X
VL - 50
SP - 103
EP - 129
JO - JOURNAL OF MODERN AFRICAN STUDIES
JF - JOURNAL OF MODERN AFRICAN STUDIES
IS - 1
M1 - N/A
ER -