Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- EDITORIAL ARTICLE
- ARTICLES
- Visual Activism: A Look at the Documentary Born This Way
- African Queer, African Digital: Reflections on Zanele Muholi's Films4peace & Other Works
- To Revolutionary Type Love: An Interview with Kawira Mwirichia, Neo Musangi, Mal Muga, Awuor Onyango, Faith Wanjala & Wawira Njeru
- Liminal Spaces & Conflicts of Culture in South African Queer Films: Inxeba (The Wound)
- Gay, African, Middle-Class & Fabulous: Writing Queerness in New Writing from Nigeria & South Africa
- The City as a Metaphor of Safe Queer Experimentation in Monica Arac de Nyeko's ‘Jambula Tree’ & Beatrice Lamwaka's ‘Pillar of Love’
- Homosexuality & the Postcolonial Idea: Notes from Kabelo Sello Duiker's The Quiet Violence of Dreams
- A Warm, Woolly Silence: Rethinking Silence through T.O. Molefe's ‘Lower Main’ & Monica Arac de Nyeko's ‘Jambula Tree’
- Breaking/Voicing the Silence: Diriye Osman's Fairytales for Lost Children
- Reading for Ruptures: HIV & AIDS, Sexuality & Silencing in Zoë Wicomb's ‘In Search of Tommie’
- Queer Temporalities & Epistemologies: Jude Dibia's Walking with Shadows & Chinelo Okparanta's Under the Udala Trees
- Dilemma of an African Woman Faced with Bisexuality: A Reading of Armand Meula's Coq mâle, coq femelle
- FEATURED ARTICLES
- LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
- TRIBUTE
- REVIEWS
Homosexuality & the Postcolonial Idea: Notes from Kabelo Sello Duiker's The Quiet Violence of Dreams
from ARTICLES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 March 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- EDITORIAL ARTICLE
- ARTICLES
- Visual Activism: A Look at the Documentary Born This Way
- African Queer, African Digital: Reflections on Zanele Muholi's Films4peace & Other Works
- To Revolutionary Type Love: An Interview with Kawira Mwirichia, Neo Musangi, Mal Muga, Awuor Onyango, Faith Wanjala & Wawira Njeru
- Liminal Spaces & Conflicts of Culture in South African Queer Films: Inxeba (The Wound)
- Gay, African, Middle-Class & Fabulous: Writing Queerness in New Writing from Nigeria & South Africa
- The City as a Metaphor of Safe Queer Experimentation in Monica Arac de Nyeko's ‘Jambula Tree’ & Beatrice Lamwaka's ‘Pillar of Love’
- Homosexuality & the Postcolonial Idea: Notes from Kabelo Sello Duiker's The Quiet Violence of Dreams
- A Warm, Woolly Silence: Rethinking Silence through T.O. Molefe's ‘Lower Main’ & Monica Arac de Nyeko's ‘Jambula Tree’
- Breaking/Voicing the Silence: Diriye Osman's Fairytales for Lost Children
- Reading for Ruptures: HIV & AIDS, Sexuality & Silencing in Zoë Wicomb's ‘In Search of Tommie’
- Queer Temporalities & Epistemologies: Jude Dibia's Walking with Shadows & Chinelo Okparanta's Under the Udala Trees
- Dilemma of an African Woman Faced with Bisexuality: A Reading of Armand Meula's Coq mâle, coq femelle
- FEATURED ARTICLES
- LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
- TRIBUTE
- REVIEWS
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Despite its significant contribution towards the transition from apartheid to democracy in South Africa, it is clear nowadays that the Truth and Reconciliation Commission was not faultless. When The Aversion Project states that reconciliation and healing could not occur in the ‘absence of knowledge and understanding’ (Van Zyl et al.: 11), it implies that democracy in South Africa is built over troubling misunderstandings. Kabelo Sello Duiker's The Quiet Violence of Dreams (2001) depicts homosexuality as a privileged symbolic field that translates these misunderstandings. Though enshrined in the 1996 South African Constitution, perceptions of homosexuality are never freed from moral disgust or aversion. In this relation, centring the narrative on homosexuality takes this issue in a similar direction to that of postcolonial theory as portrayed by scholars who assert its ‘subversive strategies’ (Ashcroft et al. 1989: 33). The paper illustrates how homosexuality in The Quiet Violence of Dreams appears like the semiotic realisation's ground of the postcolonial ideal.
HOMOSEXUALITY IN THE QUIET VIOLENCE OF DREAMS
Moura (‘La Critique Postcoloniale, Étude des Spécificités’: 18) and Moudileno (‘Littérature et Postcolonie’: 9) insist that any postcolonial reading needs to always come back to the literary text. Consequently, this section aims to highlight what The Quiet Violence of Dreams is all about, before homosexuality is discussed as the central topic of the narrative. When they came to Cape Town from Johannesburg to study, protagonists Mmabatho and Tshepo believed they could make it in the post-apartheid town. Mmabatho is unwillingly transformed into a heterosexual and lesbian whore because all her black and white male partners deceive her. On his part, Tshepo misses four months of studies at Rhodes University because of psychiatric troubles. After recovery, he looks for jobs in vain. He finally finds a work as masseur at Steamy Windows, a homosexual shop. His profession labels him as ‘Angelo’. Tshepo (Angelo) is found back in Johannesburg at the novel's end, where he takes care of street children in an orphanage.
The focus of the narrative on Angelo-Tshepo makes him play an explicit function in relation to Duiker's commitment in the narrative.
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- ALT 36: Queer Theory in Filmand FictionAfrican Literature Today 36, pp. 96 - 109Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2018