Decolonising Men and Masculinities Research in South Africa

IF 0.5 Q4 SOCIOLOGY
Sakhumzi Mfecane
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

ABSTRACT The calls for knowledge decolonisation pervade most academic disciplines in South Africa today. In this paper I argue for epistemological decolonisation within men and masculinities studies through “delinking” from western gender paradigms. The paper draws on the Xhosa concept of manhood called indoda to illustrate African-centred ways of decolonising and theorising masculinities research which cater to the needs of indigenous African communities. The evidence suggests that masculinities in Xhosa culture centre on the rites of passage to manhood called ulwaluko, which involve physical alteration of the penis through circumcision. As ulwaluko inserts a fixed bodily mark of Xhosa manhood identity it challenges theories which perceive masculinities as mere “scripted performances” with no permanent bodily impact, and those which argue that masculinities are multiple and unstable. Although multiple masculinities coexist, they are rooted in ulwaluko as primary evidence of manhood. The paper concludes by showing the benefits of decolonised, African-centred scholarship for intervention programmes aimed at fighting gender oppression in South Africa.
南非非殖民化男性与男子气概研究
知识非殖民化的呼声今天弥漫在南非的大多数学科。在本文中,我主张通过与西方性别范式“脱钩”,在男性和男性气质研究中实现认识论上的非殖民化。这篇论文借鉴了科萨人的男子气概概念,即indoda,来说明以非洲为中心的去殖民化和理论化男子气概研究的方法,这些方法迎合了非洲土著社区的需要。有证据表明,科萨文化中的男子气概集中在被称为ulwaluko的成年仪式上,其中包括通过割礼对阴茎进行物理改变。由于ulwaluko插入了一个固定的科萨人男子气概身份的身体标记,它挑战了那些认为男性气概仅仅是没有永久身体影响的“脚本表演”的理论,以及那些认为男性气概是多元和不稳定的理论。虽然多种男子气概并存,但它们都植根于ulwaluko,作为男子气概的主要证据。这篇论文最后展示了非殖民化、以非洲为中心的学术对旨在打击南非性别压迫的干预方案的好处。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
25.00%
发文量
26
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