In the second episode of Queer Circles, Matthew Blaise talks with sociologist Adebayo Quadry-Adekanbi and writer and queer activist Ani Kayode Somtochukwu about the role of queerness in Nigerian arts and literature. They establish that queerness is not a concept imported from the West, but that queer (hi)stories and realities have always existed in Nigeria. Homophobia, on the other hand, is a product of the colonial past. In this decolonial perspective, queerness stands not only for sexual and gender identities of the LGBTQ+ community, but rather for a critical political stance towards normative structures. Queer African storytelling is thus also critical of a westernization of the international literary scene, which, with its identity-fixated, bourgeois, and neoliberal posits, obscures alternative narratives of precolonial, community-based, and resistant forms of queerness.
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All published episodes of the Queer Circles Podcast can be found here.
Next episodes:
Friday, May 26
Friday, June 9
Friday, June 23