非洲的性行为

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES African Studies Pub Date : 2020-03-25 DOI:10.1093/obo/9780199846733-0215
M. Epprecht
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Yet in Africa, political and religious leaders frequently assert or imply that “African sexuality,” as distinct from “Western sexuality” or “Arab sexuality,” exists as a distinctive, timeless, and singular phenomenon, often in ways that promote harmful stereotypes. “Homosexuality is un-African,” to give one notorious example, is a widely made claim that has been made to justify vigilantism and state repression against sexual minorities throughout the continent. Certain features of Africa’s modern political economy, in conjunction with inherited gender, ethnic, and other aspects of culture and identity, have meanwhile facilitated the emergence of seemingly distinctive expressions of sexuality on the continent, or among specific peoples from regions within. 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引用次数: 3

摘要

人类的性行为是一种高度复杂的现象,涉及我们在性方面的感受、思考和行为(或非性行为),所有这些都会随着时间的推移而发生变化,包括随着年龄的增长,我们的身体,以及我们生活和与他人相处的政治经济和文化。自然(遗传、激素、身体禀赋)与后天培养(儿童社会化、文化、法律)的相互作用是不可预测的,而且往往只是初步了解。因此,学者们通常更喜欢“性”一词来反映人类性行为的偶然性和多变的多样性,以及性与更广阔的世界(看得见和看不见)的关系。然而,在非洲,政治和宗教领袖经常断言或暗示,与“西方性行为”或“阿拉伯性行为”不同的“非洲性行为”是一种独特、永恒和独特的现象,往往以宣扬有害刻板印象的方式存在。举一个臭名昭著的例子,“同性恋不是非洲的”是一个被广泛提出的主张,旨在为整个非洲大陆的私刑和国家对性少数群体的镇压辩护。与此同时,非洲现代政治经济的某些特征,加上遗传的性别、种族以及文化和身份的其他方面,促进了非洲大陆或来自该地区的特定民族出现看似独特的性表达。例如,高水平的男性移民加上低水平的男性包皮环切术和长期存在的多个同时性伴侣的文化,在很大程度上助长了艾滋病毒在南部非洲的传播,尤其是与穆斯林占多数的地区相比。这种区别具有重要的社会、健康和人权影响。因此,研究非洲当地或地区性文化是如何产生的,可以潜在地解决与性行为的污名化、刻板印象、保密和羞耻感有关的危害,如艾滋病毒传播。本文介绍了通过一系列主要在社会科学和人文学科的文献揭示的一些关键问题。为这篇文章选择的各种标题只是为了方便——在大多数情况下引用的作品超越了简单的分类,就像性本身超越了简洁的启发式边界一样。还要注意的是,自20世纪90年代末以来,致力于该主题的研究数量激增,揭示了与理解性行为相关的因素(例如,酒精和毒品使用、色情、无性恋、邪教和社交媒体)的范围越来越广。我引用了少量法语材料,但肯定会有更多丰富的阿拉伯语、非洲土著语言和其他前殖民地语言,如葡萄牙语,等待未来的研究项目。
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Sexualities in Africa
Human sexuality is a highly complex phenomenon that involves the ways we feel, think, and act (or not) sexually, all subject to change over time in relation to our physical bodies as they age, and to the political economy and culture in which we live and relate to others. Nature (genetics, hormones, physical endowments) interacts with nurture (childhood socialization, culture, law) in ways that are not predictable and indeed often only rudimentarily understood. Scholars thus often prefer the term “sexualities” to reflect the contingent and changeable plurality of human sexual behavior, and the ways in which sex is conceived in relation to the wider worlds, seen and unseen. Yet in Africa, political and religious leaders frequently assert or imply that “African sexuality,” as distinct from “Western sexuality” or “Arab sexuality,” exists as a distinctive, timeless, and singular phenomenon, often in ways that promote harmful stereotypes. “Homosexuality is un-African,” to give one notorious example, is a widely made claim that has been made to justify vigilantism and state repression against sexual minorities throughout the continent. Certain features of Africa’s modern political economy, in conjunction with inherited gender, ethnic, and other aspects of culture and identity, have meanwhile facilitated the emergence of seemingly distinctive expressions of sexuality on the continent, or among specific peoples from regions within. For instance, high levels of male migration together with low levels of male circumcision and a long-standing culture of having multiple concurrent sexual partners have combined to abet the spread of HIV in southern Africa to a far greater extent than elsewhere, particularly in contrast to Muslim-majority regions. Such distinctions bear important social, health, and human rights implications. The study of how local or regional sexual cultures within Africa arose can thus potentially address harms, like HIV transmission, that are linked to stigma, stereotypes, secrecy, and shame around sexuality. This essay introduces some of the key issues as revealed through a range of literatures primarily in the social sciences and humanities. The various headings chosen for this article are for convenience only—the works cited in most cases transcend easy categorization, much as sexuality itself transcends neat heuristic borders. Note as well that the number of studies devoted to the topic has exploded since the late 1990s to shed light on an ever-widening circle of factors pertinent to understanding sexualities (alcohol and drug use, pornography, asexuality, cults, and social media, for example). I have included a small number of references to material in French but there are bound to be further rich sources in Arabic, in indigenous African languages, and in other former colonial languages like Portuguese that await future research projects.
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African Studies
African Studies AREA STUDIES-
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