The body is an assemblage of not only the physical and the material. The body is a text which is embedded with codes and meanings. There exists solid scholarship on the centrality of screen media in documenting queer identities and practices. However, these studies have primarily concerned themselves with examining screen texts in their attempt to make sense of queer subjectivities. This proposed study sets out to go beyond the analysis of screen texts by focusing on the screened queer bodies as living texts that have the potential to articulate narratives which are normally side-lined my mainstream literary, artistic and media discourses. Drawing largely on Judith Butler’s postulations on “bodies that matter” and “performativity” as performative figures that disrupt essentialising and normalising discourses of sexuality and gender constitution. Through an analysis of diverse screen documents (films, short-films, music videos and documentaries), I set out to examine how queer African bodies projected on screen articulate the intersection between atypical temporalities, race, gender and sexuality. The screen queer bodies, I argue, have the potential to reconstruct not just media and filmic forms, but more importantly how non-normative sexualities and gender identities are constructed and come into discursive being.
Project
Bodies and/as Texts: Representing queer on screen in contemporary Africa
Related to Bodies and/as Texts: Representing queer on screen in contemporary Africa
Publication
Gender and naming practices, and the creation of a taxonomy of masculinities in the South African soap opera The Queen
Ncube, Gibson. 2019. Gender and naming practices, and the creation of a taxonomy of masculinities in the South African soap opera The Queen. Nomina African...
Publication
“Human Beings Have a Hard Time Relating to That Which Does Not Resemble Them”: Queering Normativity in Nnedi Okorafor’s Lagoon
Ncube, Gibson. 2020. “Human Beings Have a Hard Time Relating to That Which Does Not Resemble Them”: Queering Normativity in Nnedi Okorafor’s Lagoon. Scruti...
Publication
Eternal mothers, whores or witches: The oddities of being a woman in politics in Zimbabwe
Ncube, Gibson. 2020. Eternal mothers, whores or witches: The oddities of being a woman in politics in Zimbabwe. Agenda, 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1080/101309...
Publication
Skin and Silence in Selected Maghrebian Queer Films
Ncube, Gibson. 2021. Skin and Silence in Selected Maghrebian Queer Films. Journal of African Cultural Studies, 33(1), 51–66. https://doi.org/10.1080/136968...
Publication
Frottage: Frictions of Intimacy across the Black Diaspora (Keguro Macharia)
Ncube, Gibson. 2021. Frottage: Frictions of Intimacy across the Black Diaspora (Keguro Macharia). Tydskrif Vir Letterkunde, 58(1), 172–174. https://doi.org...
Publication
Cultures of Change in Contemporary Zimbabwe
Nyambi, Oliver, Tendai Mangena and Gibson Ncube. (Eds.). 2021. Cultures of Change in Contemporary Zimbabwe. Routledge. https://www.routledge.com/Cultures-o...
Event
Queer bodies in African films - STIAS Public Lecture by Gibson Ncube
This will be a hybrid event with limited spaces for in-person attendance, register here by 19 April 2021 Gibson Ncube, Lecturer in the Department o...
Article
Second Iso Lomso cohort selected
STIAS is pleased to announce its second cohort for the Iso Lomso Fellowships for Early Career African Researchers. The STIAS Research and Fellowship Progr...
Article
Are we bound to violence? Looking at depictions of toxic queer masculinities in South African films - Fellows’ seminar by Gibson Ncube
“Two South African films Skoonheid and Inxeba, in spite of their diametrically opposed socio-racial contexts, broach violent and toxic queer masculinities....
Article
Queer bodies in African film - STIAS public lecture by Gibson Ncube
“I set out to make two interventions – a focus on the body as a site of knowledge-making in understanding queerness where gender and sexual identity are no...