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Homosexuality and the law: a gay revolution in South Africa?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Extract

Recent constitutional developments in South Africa and political statements by President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe have brought to the fore the issue of social tolerance of homosexual conduct. It is a sensitive issue, and is approached in this article from a legal anthropological angle. A distinction is drawn between situational same-sex activity and a gay lifestyle. Although both constitute homosexual conduct, situational same-sex activity need not imply a gay lifestyle, or even a homosexual orientation.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1997

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References

1 Cf. R. Holmes, “The Winnie Mandela trial and the politics of race and sexuality”, in M. Gevisser and E. Cameron (eds.), Defiant Desire—Gay and Lesbian Lives in South Africa, 1994, 284–294.

2 Weekly Mail and Guardian (South Africa), 4–10 August 1995; The Citizen (South Africa), 22 August, 1995; for more particulars see “Zimbabwe—the book fair drama” in C. Dunton and M. Palmberg, Human Rights and Homosexuality in Southern Africa, Current African Issues no. 19, Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, June 1996, 8–17. A year later the drama repeated itself. This time the Zimbabwean government used its Board of Censors to prevent a book display by the Gay and Lesbian Association of Zimbabwe. When the Zimbabwean High Court allowed the association to display civil rights pamphlets, demonstrators forced members of the association to abandon their booth at the book fair and set fire to their literature: “Gay bashers threaten book fair”, Mail and Guardian, 2–8 August, 1996; “Zimbabwe gays flee mob”, Sunday Times, 4 August, 1996.

3 The Citizen, 28 November, 1995; Weekly Mail and Guardian, 5–11 January, 1996. Cf. also Drum (South Africa), October 1995.

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13 Not tolerated on the mines was same-sex activity “across the colour-line”. Cf. Rex v. Goodman 1914 T.P.D. 608; Cunningham v. Cunningham 1952(1) S.A.L.R. 167(C).

14 As quoted by Harries, op. cit., 322.

15 Cf. Rex v. S. 1937 N.P.D. 135; Regina v. M. and Another 1958(2) PH.H. 338(C); see also Rex v. Mateba 1950(2) PH.H. 130 (G.W.); Rex v. Sera and Another 1951(1) PH.H. 15(0); Regina v. Mabana 1954(2) PH.H. 178(T); S. v. M. 1977(2) S.A.L.R. 357 (Tk.); S. v. M. 1984(4) S.A.L.R. 111(T).

16 1988(2) S.A.L.R. 254(T).

17 Gevisser and Cameron, op. cit.

18 Cf. M. Gevisser, “Sexual politics and the politics of liberation”, in ibid., 74—84, and, by the same author, “A chance for SA's gays to grab the constitutional gap”, Weekly Mail and Guardian, 1–7 July, 1994; E. Cameron, “Sexual orientation and the constitution: a test case for human rights”, (1993) 110 South African Law Journal 450–472; C. Dunton and M. Palmberg, “South Africa—the Bill of Rights issue”, in Dunton and Palmberg, op. cit., 28—31.

19 Cf. S. v. A. 1995(2) B.C.L.R. 153(C).

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21 Cf. Sanders, A.J.G.M., “Towards formulating the tenets of a communitarian order”, in Vorster, W.S. (ed.), Building a New Nation: The Quest for a New South Africa, 1991, 178–187, also published in (1992) 16, 2 Legal Studies Forum 145153.Google Scholar

22 Gf. Vivian Warby, “Gay revolution in SA—how position in society has improved”, The Citizen, 5 June, 1996; “Are legal gay weddings next?” Mail and Guardian, 4–10 October, 1996.