Costa, Thaís Vieira; https://orcid.org/0009-0007-3067-497X; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4769843806352652
Resumo:
This dissertation investigates sexual and gender dissidences in South African and Kenyan
contexts through the analysis of three contemporary films: Inxeba – The Wound (2017) and
Heaven Reaches Down to Earth (2020), from South Africa, and Stories of Our Lives (2014),
from Kenya. The research starts from the recognition that dissident experiences existed in the
pre-colonial period (Murray; Roscoe, 1998), although they have been silenced by normative
discourses throughout history. Two dominant imaginaries prevail in narratives about these
experiences on the continent: that of structural homophobia and the interpretation of queerness
as a Western import (Ekine; Abbas, 2018; Rea et al., 2018). Based on film studies, with
emphasis on representational analysis (Hall, 2016) and figural analysis (Brenez, 2023), this
dissertation examines how queer African cinemas articulate these experiences through visual,
symbolic, and narrative elements, addressing issues such as desire, identity conflict,
corporeality, nature, and pleasure. It also considers the contexts of production and reception of
the works, as well as other artistic languages, such as photography and literature, that dialogue
with the films. The central aim is to identify how the figural resources in the films challenge
normative conceptions and construct new images of dissident identities on the African
continent. Ultimately, the study reaffirms the role of cinema as a powerful language in shaping
subjectivities and expanding contemporary discussions on gender and sexuality.