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She Called Me Woman

Nigeria's Queer Women Speak

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"These true stories are beautifully told, the pain and honesty and hope and joy in these accounts is strong like a song" – Stella Duffy This stirring and intimate collection brings together 25 first-hand accounts to paint a vivid portrait of what it means to be a queer Nigerian woman. These beautifully told stories of resistance and resilience reveal the realities of a community that will no longer be invisible. From the joy and excitement of first love, and from childhood games to addiction and suicide, She Called Me Woman shows us how Nigerian queer women, in all their multitudes, attempt to build a life together. She Called Me Woman challenges us to rethink what it means to be a Nigerian 'woman', negotiating relationships, money, sexuality and freedom, identifying outside the gender binary, and the difficulties of achieving hopes and dreams in a climate of fear.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 1, 2018
      The editors of this powerful and revealing collection present the stories of 25 LGBTQ Nigerian women “to correct the invisibility, the confusion, the caricaturisation, and the writing out of history” plaguing Nigerian conversations around queerness, which “frequently dehumanize and are dehumanizing.” These “stories of resistance and resilience” and everyday life come from a group of anonymized contributors varied in their backgrounds, class, and experiences whose thoughts on religious belief and marriage, recollections of their dating histories, and advice for other queer women are often thoughtful and wise. Common threads include the prevalence and acceptance of same-sex relationships among students in some secondary schools, belief in a God of grace and understanding, and ordinary needs, desires, and ambitions. There are stories of physical violence, sexual assault, and acts of cruelty—many of the women feel they are “living a double life” because it is unsafe to come out, and they’ve seen or experienced isolation, drug abuse, and domestic violence—and of support, love, and community. Mixed in are funny and relatable moments; one respondent wishes her clingy girlfriend would stop calling, and another describes her nonmonogamous love life as multiple “situationships.” The editors of this collection succeed in bringing LGBTQ Nigerian women out of the shadows.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

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