{"title":"Literature and Notions of Black Lesbian Solidarity in Chinelo Okparanta’s Under the Udala Trees","authors":"Abideen David Amodu","doi":"10.25159/2412-8457/11826","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Frances M. Beal (1968) explains that being Black and female is double jeopardy; however, being Black, female, and lesbian is triple jeopardy. Many countries in Africa have criminalised same-sex marriages and sexual relationships. In Nigeria, a sentence of up to 14 years’ imprisonment is likely for people caught in consensual same-sex intercourse. By the same token, 12 northern states of Nigeria’s 36 states have the death penalty for same-sex intercourse. Lesbians in Nigeria and across Africa have continued to suffer structural and non-structural forms of castigation and criticism from various facets of society, which have had overarching effects on the psyche of lesbians in Africa. The average Black lesbian is traumatised and challenged by norms, culture, traditions and religion. These social institutions have been structured to repress lesbians and members of the LGBTQIA+ communities at large. In the fight for their rightful spots in society, solidarity becomes non-negotiable, an essential tool and motivation in the struggle for visibility and protection. Not many works of fiction from Africa have explored the trajectories and struggles of Black lesbians. One of the most significant moves was made by Chinelo Okparanta in 2015, when she published Under the Udala Trees, which is widely tagged as “lesbian fiction.” This article, therefore, contextualises the notions of lesbian solidarity as portrayed in Okparanta’s novel and its essentiality to the struggles of Black lesbian women across the African continent.","PeriodicalId":297162,"journal":{"name":"Gender Questions","volume":"14 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Gender Questions","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-8457/11826","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Frances M. Beal (1968) explains that being Black and female is double jeopardy; however, being Black, female, and lesbian is triple jeopardy. Many countries in Africa have criminalised same-sex marriages and sexual relationships. In Nigeria, a sentence of up to 14 years’ imprisonment is likely for people caught in consensual same-sex intercourse. By the same token, 12 northern states of Nigeria’s 36 states have the death penalty for same-sex intercourse. Lesbians in Nigeria and across Africa have continued to suffer structural and non-structural forms of castigation and criticism from various facets of society, which have had overarching effects on the psyche of lesbians in Africa. The average Black lesbian is traumatised and challenged by norms, culture, traditions and religion. These social institutions have been structured to repress lesbians and members of the LGBTQIA+ communities at large. In the fight for their rightful spots in society, solidarity becomes non-negotiable, an essential tool and motivation in the struggle for visibility and protection. Not many works of fiction from Africa have explored the trajectories and struggles of Black lesbians. One of the most significant moves was made by Chinelo Okparanta in 2015, when she published Under the Udala Trees, which is widely tagged as “lesbian fiction.” This article, therefore, contextualises the notions of lesbian solidarity as portrayed in Okparanta’s novel and its essentiality to the struggles of Black lesbian women across the African continent.
弗朗西丝·m·比尔(Frances M. Beal, 1968)解释说,既是黑人又是女性是双重危险;然而,身为黑人、女性和女同性恋是三重危险。非洲许多国家将同性婚姻和性关系定为犯罪。在尼日利亚,在双方同意的情况下发生同性性行为的人可能会被判处长达14年的监禁。出于同样的原因,尼日利亚36个州中有12个北部州对同性性交处以死刑。尼日利亚和整个非洲的女同性恋者继续遭受来自社会各个方面的结构性和非结构性的惩罚和批评,这对非洲女同性恋者的心理产生了重大影响。普通的黑人女同性恋受到规范、文化、传统和宗教的创伤和挑战。这些社会机构的结构是为了压制女同性恋和LGBTQIA+社区的成员。在争取她们在社会中应有地位的斗争中,团结成为不可谈判的,是争取知名度和保护的重要工具和动力。没有多少来自非洲的小说作品探索了黑人女同性恋者的轨迹和斗争。最重要的举措之一是奇内洛·奥克帕兰塔(chinello Okparanta)在2015年出版了《乌达拉树下》(Under the Udala Trees),这本书被广泛贴上了“女同性恋小说”的标签。因此,本文将奥克帕兰塔小说中所描绘的女同性恋团结的概念及其对整个非洲大陆黑人女同性恋斗争的重要性置于语境中。