Metalinguistic discourses of ‘styling the other’

Pub Date : 2024-01-12 DOI:10.1558/genl.22690
Busi Makoni
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Abstract

This article explores how mobility shapes language, gender and sexuality during periods of indeterminacy, focusing on the discursive construction of masculinities. Using styling/‘styling the other’ as an interpretive framework, the article analyses how economic precarity leads to ambivalence in the masculinities of Zimbabwean heterosexual-identifying male migrants (ages 26–30 years) in Johannesburg. Interview data suggests that these men engaged in male-to-male sex work to achieve economic security. To solicit wealthy white men, the men performed stereotypical Black hypermasculinity and sophisticated, cosmopolitan gay subjectivities through language crossing and physical styling. These performances ultimately aimed to achieve the normative masculine identity of being a husband and provider. The article elucidates the paradox in which the men appropriated Polari, a British gay patois, and foreign or white understandings of Black/African masculinity to style the ‘other’ while fulfilling traditional Zimbabwean notions of masculinity.
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塑造他人 "的金属语言学论述
本文探讨了流动性如何在不确定时期塑造语言、性别和性行为,重点是男性特征的话语建构。文章使用 "造型"/"造型他人 "作为解释框架,分析了经济不稳定如何导致约翰内斯堡的津巴布韦异性恋男性移民(26-30 岁)的男性气质出现矛盾。访谈数据表明,这些男性从事男对男的性工作是为了获得经济保障。为了招揽富有的白人男性,这些男性通过语言交际和身体造型,表现出刻板的黑人超男子气概和成熟、国际化的同性恋主体性。这些表演的最终目的是实现丈夫和供养者的规范男性身份。文章阐释了这些男性挪用英国同性恋土语 Polari 和外国或白人对黑人/非洲男子气概的理解来塑造 "他人 "形象,同时实现津巴布韦传统男子气概概念的悖论。
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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