Living Our Lives on the Edge: Power, Space and Sexual Orientation in Cape Town Townships, South Africa

Author: Salo Elaine  

Publisher: Springer Publishing Company

ISSN: 1868-9884

Source: Sexuality Research and Social Policy, Vol.7, Iss.4, 2010-12, pp. : 298-309

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Abstract

Much of social science literature about South African cities fails to represent its complex spectrum of sexual practices and associated identities. The unintended effects of such representations are that a compulsory heterosexuality is naturalised in, and reiterative with, dominant constructions of blackness in townships. In this paper, we argue that the assertion of discreet lesbian and gay identities in black townships of a South African city such as Cape Town is influenced by the historical racial and socio-economic divides that have marked urban landscape. In their efforts to recoup a positive sense of gendered personhood, residents have constructed a moral economy anchored in reproductive heterosexuality. We draw upon ethnographic data to show how sexual minorities live their lives vicariously in spaces they have prised open within the extant sex/gender binary. They are able to assert the identities of moffie and man-vrou (mannish woman) without threatening the dominant ideology of heterosexuality.