The Paradox of Same-Sex Representations: The Presence/Absence of Gays in Ugandan Short Stories

Authors

  • Edgar Fred Nabutanyi Makerere University Kampala

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2078-9785/2502

Keywords:

fiction, homosexuality, stigmatisation, same-sex sexuality, Uganda, Ugandan short story

Abstract

The fact that same-sex sexuality is a topically combustive issue in Ugandan public discourse is reflected in debates it inspires. The debates that rage in Uganda regarding this topic are ferociously polarised around one camp that evokes the protection of minors from exploitation by “foreign†gays and upholding Ugandan culture to support the criminalisation of a sexual orientation, and another that cites modernity and Universalist’s human rights discourse to advocate for the fundamental human rights of individuals who choose to engage in same-sex relationships. The intense national anxiety around this topic is perhaps best illustrated by the controversial 2009 Anti-homosexuality Bill and the debates it produced. Granted, many Ugandan commentators, like politicians, journalists, religious leaders, traditional leaders and medical practitioners have joined in this debate to advance particular standpoints regarding this topic. However, one group of public intellectuals whose critique of this debate has attracted little scholarly attention, comprises Ugandan writers. In this article, I investigate how Ugandan short story writers have utilised fiction to map out the essence of queerness in Uganda. I argue that Lamwaka’s ‘Pillar of Love,’ (2012) Arac’s ‘Jambula Tree’ (2007) and Paelo’s ‘Picture Frame’ (2013) deploy subtle and nuanced discursive strategies to foreground the presence/absence paradox that is inherent in Ugandan discourse of same-sex sexuality.

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Author Biography

Edgar Fred Nabutanyi, Makerere University Kampala

Edgar Fred Nabutanyi holds a PhD from the English Department, Stellenbosch University. He is currently a Lecturer in the Department of Literature, Makerere University. While his teaching interests are in Children’s Literature, Critical Theory, Practical Criticism, and Media Studies, his research interest converge around issues of public discourses in the public sphere regarding how these channels — fiction and media — are subverted and assimilated by vulnerable and minority subjectivities for self-enunciation. My central thesis is that vulnerable minorities like children, women, ethnic groups and sexual minorities stealthy reconfigure the public sphere with such illocutionary force to make their issues matter and transform their lives from mere statistical footnotes to critical societal issues.

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Published

2018-05-09

How to Cite

Nabutanyi, Edgar Fred. 2017. “The Paradox of Same-Sex Representations: The Presence/Absence of Gays in Ugandan Short Stories”. Imbizo 8 (1):15 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2078-9785/2502.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2017-05-05
Accepted 2017-09-26
Published 2018-05-09