Queering the Nigerian Cinema and Politics of Gay Culture

Stephen Ogheneruro Okpadah
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Abstract

The advocacy for gayism and lesbianism in Nigeria is informed by transnational cultural processes, transculturalism, interculturalism, multiculturalism and globalisation. Although critical dimensions on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) are becoming recurrent subjects in Nigerian scholarship, scholarly works on LGBT, sexual identity and Nigerian cinema remain scarce. Perhaps, this is because of indigenous Nigerian cultural processes. While Chimamanda Adichie, a Nigerian novelist cum socio-political activist, campaigns against marginalisation and subjugation of gays and lesbians and for their integration into the Nigerian cultural system, numerous African socio-cultural and political activists hold a view that is dialectical to Adichie’s. The position of the members of the anti-gay group was further strengthened with the institution of stringent laws against gay practice in Nigeria by the President Goodluck Jonathan led government in 2014. In recent times, the gay, bisexual, transgender and lesbian cultures have been a source of raw material for filmmakers. Some of the thematic preoccupations of films have bordered on questions such as: what does it mean to be gay? Why are gays marginalised? Are gays socially constructed? What is the future of the advocacy for gay and lesbian liberation in Nigeria? Although most Nigerian film narratives are destructive critiques of the gay culture, the purpose of this research is not to cast aspersion on the moral dimension of LGBT. Rather, I argue that films on LGBT create spaces and maps for a critical exploration of the gay question. While the paper investigates the politics of gay culture in Nigerian cinema, I also posit that gays and lesbians are socio-culturally rather than biologically constructed. This research adopts literary and content analysis methods to engage Moses Ebere’s Men in Love with reference to other home videos on the gay and lesbian motifs.
同性恋:尼日利亚电影与同性恋文化政治
尼日利亚对同性恋的倡导受到跨国文化进程、跨文化主义、跨文化主义、多元文化主义和全球化的影响。尽管对女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋和变性人(LGBT)的批判已经成为尼日利亚学术研究中反复出现的主题,但关于LGBT、性身份和尼日利亚电影的学术著作仍然很少。也许,这是因为尼日利亚本土的文化进程。尼日利亚小说家兼社会政治活动家Chimamanda Adichie反对同性恋者被边缘化和被征服,并呼吁他们融入尼日利亚文化体系,而许多非洲社会文化和政治活动家的观点与Adichie的观点是辩证的。2014年,尼日利亚总统古德勒克·乔纳森领导的政府制定了严格的法律,禁止同性恋行为,这进一步加强了反同性恋组织成员的地位。近年来,同性恋、双性恋、变性人和女同性恋文化一直是电影人的素材来源。电影的一些主题关注已经接近于这样的问题:同性恋意味着什么?为什么同性恋会被边缘化?同性恋是社会建构的吗?在奈及利亚,同性恋解放运动的前景如何?尽管大多数尼日利亚电影叙事都是对同性恋文化的破坏性批评,但本研究的目的并不是对LGBT的道德维度进行诽谤。相反,我认为关于LGBT的电影为对同性恋问题的批判性探索创造了空间和地图。虽然这篇论文调查了尼日利亚电影中同性恋文化的政治,但我也假设男女同性恋是社会文化而不是生物构造的。本研究采用文学分析和内容分析的方法,将摩西·埃伯雷的《恋爱中的男人》与其他家庭录像中的男女同性恋母题联系起来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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