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    Sex talk: Mutuality and power in the shadow of HIV/AIDS in Africa.

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    Publication date
    2007
    Author
    Bujra, Janet M.
    Keyword
    Sexuality discourses
    HIV/AIDS
    Sexual relations
    Sexual practices
    Sex and gender
    Talking
    Rights
    © 2007 University of Bradford. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share-Alike License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/uk).
    Peer-Reviewed
    No
    
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    Abstract
    Bids for mutuality in sexual partnerships are key to AIDS campaigning slogans such as `negotiate¿, `know your partner¿ and `use condoms¿. This paper explores the contradiction between more mutuality in sexual relations and the gender power politics that render such mutuality difficult to achieve in Africa, as well as the caricatures of `African sexuality¿ that have pervaded some of the literature. It looks at the new discourses of sexuality delivered via NGOs and the state as well as the ways in which customary silences about sex are being broken by ordinary people. It asks whether, given the threat of HIV infection, people are talking in new ways about sexual relationships, and how this talk is gendered. It also addresses the challenge to African feminism of sexuality discourses and how these need to be rethought in the context of AIDS. It concludes that the prospect of death by sex is transforming discourses, challenging customary sexual practice and putting gendered inequalities in question.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3844
    Version
    published version paper
    Citation
    Bujra, J. (2007). Sex talk: Mutuality and power in the shadow of HIV/AIDS in Africa. University of Bradford, Department of Peace Studies, International Centre for Participation Studies. ICPS Working Paper 8.
    Link to publisher’s version
    http://www.brad.ac.uk/acad/icps/publications/papers/index.php
    Type
    Working Paper
    Collections
    Social Sciences Publications

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