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[Commlist] Call for Chapters: Queer Digital Citizenship in Africa: spaces of agency and resistance
Fri Apr 04 12:11:00 GMT 2025
Call for Chapters:
Queer Digital Citizenship in Africa: spaces of agency and resistance
Edited by Tanja Bosch, Nyx Mclean and Tony Roberts
Bloomsbury Academic, Digital Africa Series
We invite scholars, activists, and practitioners to contribute to an
edited volume on Queer Digital Citizenship in Africa. Following the
publications of /Digital Citizenship in Africa/ (2023) and /Feminist
Digital Citizenship in Africa/ (2025), this book continues the
exploration of digital rights, identities, and activism on the
continent. This volume aims to explore how queer individuals and
communities across the African continent engage with, resist, and
reshape digital spaces to assert their citizenship, visibility, and
rights. It seeks to challenge dominant narratives of queer exclusion and
victimhood, by focusing on agency, activism, and community-building in
online environments.
As Volpp (2017) argues, queer citizenship must be understood beyond
formal legal rights, incorporating the lived realities of LGBTQI+
individuals who navigate exclusionary state structures while forging
alternative spaces for belonging. In the African context, online
platforms serve as vital arenas for such negotiations, where queerness
is both contested and reimagined.**Digital spaces have thus become
critical for LGBTQI+ communities, offering platforms for advocacy,
resistance, identity formation, and cultural production. This book will
explore why queer Africans are using digital spaces to perform
citizenship; what (dis)advantages digital spaces afford; and what
(dis)benefits have been experienced. What can be done in online spaces
that cannot be done in offline spaces in different countries across the
continent?McLean and Mugo (2015) note that digital platforms enable
queer African women to express their lived experiences, challenge
dominant narratives, and establish counter-publics that redefine their
social and political realities. Keeling (2014) further conceptualizes
digital platforms as facilitating queer operating systems (Queer OS)
that enable imaginative, unexpected, and ethical relations, thus
transforming the social and political dynamics of queer communities.**
While mainstream discourses often portray queer Africans as victims of
oppression, digital environments provide avenues for
self-representation, organizing, and community-building beyond
state-sanctioned boundaries. However, these digital spaces are also
sites of regulation, surveillance, and cyber violence, reflecting the
broader contestations around queer citizenship. McLean and Mugo (2015)
emphasize that despite the empowering potential of digital spaces, these
platforms also become arenas where marginalized identities must
negotiate increased visibility with the risks of surveillance and
digital policing.**Reddy, Monro, and Matebeni (2018) highlight how queer
African activism is deeply embedded in both local and transnational
struggles, challenging dominant state and societal structures while
engaging with global discourses on LGBTQI+ rights.
Moving between the local and the transnational, queerness in Africa
moves beyond extended categories of gender and sexuality towards a
holistic citizenship that subverts hegemony and power (Nyanzi 2014;
Matebeni 2017;). This subversion has afforded African LGBTQI+ new
opportunities of ‘queering’ the digital space. This volume builds on
interdisciplinary perspectives to interrogate how digital technologies
facilitate or hinder queer belonging, activism, and cultural expression
across African contexts. It aims to provide new insights into the
intersections of gender, sexuality, technology, and citizenship in the
African digital landscape.
We welcome contributions from a range of disciplines and methodological
approaches, including but not limited to the below, and we encourage
chapters that provide diverse case studies of queer digital citizenship:
* Digital Activism and Advocacy: How do queer Africans use digital
platforms for advocacy, policy change, and resistance? What are the
risks and rewards of online organizing?
* Social Media and Queer Visibility: How do platforms like TikTok,
Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram shape queer self-representation,
discourse, and community formation in African contexts?
* Queer Digital Counter-publics: How do African queer individuals
create alternative digital publics that resist mainstream homophobic
and transphobic narratives? How do African queer individuals use
coding, encryption, and other digital strategies for subversive
digital practices?
* Online Surveillance and Digital Policing: How do African states and
societies regulate and control queer digital spaces? What strategies
do queer users employ to navigate censorship, cyber harassment, and
surveillance? **
* Queer Archives and Digital Memory: How are African LGBTQI+ histories
being documented and archived online? What tensions arise between
digital preservation and the risks of hypervisibility? **
* Intersectionality and Digital Citizenship: How do race, class,
gender identity, and disability intersect with queer digital
experiences in African contexts?
* Queer Diasporas and Digital Connectivity: How do African queer
diasporas engage with home communities through digital platforms?
* Popular Culture and Queer African Expressions Online: How do digital
cultural productions—music, dance, art, memes—contribute to the
articulation of queer African identities?
* Queer Play, Creativity, and Virtual Realities: How do African queer
individuals use digital art and creativity, gaming, and virtual
reality to imagine and inhabit joyful, affirming worlds? What role
does digital playfulness have in fostering queer joy and
self-expression?
* Queer Digital Intimacies and Relationships: How do digital
technologies shape queer dating, relationships, and sexual cultures
in African contexts? Inclusive of the negotiation of safety and
desire in digital spaces. What are the creative ways of signalling
queerness online while maintaining safety?
* Digital Economies and Queer Livelihoods: How do African queer
individuals engage in digital economies for survival? Inclusive of
gig work, crowdfunding and other forms of online labour that offer
economic agency in contexts of discrimination.
*Submission Guidelines *
We invite extended abstracts of +/-800 words that outline the chapter’s
argument, methodology, and relevance to the volume’s theme. Please
include a reference list, and a short biography (150 words) with your
submission.
Deadline for abstracts: 30 April 2025
Submissions should be sent to (tanja.bosch /at/ uct.ac.za)
<mailto:(tanja.bosch /at/ uct.ac.za)> with the subject line “Queer Digital
Citizenship in Africa – Chapter Proposal.”
No payment is required from authors.
**
*References*
Keeling, K. (2014). Queer OS. Cinema Journal, 53(2), 152–157.
Matebeni, Z. (2017). Southern perspectives on gender relations and
sexualities: A queer intervention. /Revista de Antropologia, 60/(3), 26-44.
McLean, N., & Mugo, T.K. (2015). The Digital Age: A Feminist Future for
the Queer African Woman. IDS Bulletin, 46(4), 97–100.
Nyanzi, S. (2014). Queering Queer Africa. In Matebeni, Z. (Ed.),
Reclaiming Afrikan: Queer Perspectives on Sexual and Gender Identities
(pp. 65-70). Athlone, Cape Town: Modjaji Books.
Reddy, V., Monro, S., and Matebeni, Z. Introduction. In Queer in Africa:
LGBTI Identities, Citizenship and Activism.
Volpp, L. (2017). Chapter 8. Feminist, Sexual and Queer Citizenship. In
The Oxford Handbook of Citizenship. Oxford University Press, UK.
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