CASTER SEMENYA AND THE IDEA OF “NORMAL” BOYS AND GIRLS

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With the media spectacle around world beating athlete Caster Semenya gaining fever pitch, South African newspaper “The Cape Times” sacrificed one of its reporters working tirelessly on inequality in South Africa, to find out how common “intersexuality” is:

True hermaphroditism is more common in South Africa than anywhere else in the world. And specialists who deal with intersexed people in Gauteng say they’re seeing a new patient every four to six weeks – less than 10 percent of the condition’s estimated incidence in the province….This week Dr David Segal, a paediatric endocrinologist at Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Academic Hospital, said there was a greater incidence of true hermaphroditism, medically referred to as ovatesticular disorder of sex development, here than anywhere else in the world. Segal, who also works at Wits University’s Donald Gordon Medi-Clinic, explained this hermaphroditism meant a person was born with both testicular and ovarian tissue. This results in there not being enough testosterone to form a normal boy and too much for a girl. But what many people do not realise, Segal said, is that other conditions can lead to intersexuality.”

As my friend Dan Moshenberg (who forwarded it to me) remarked: Maybe, we could start, again, by having the medical profession not term every alternative `disorder’ or `deviance’. “A normal boy … a girl.”

LONG LIVE ZAKES MOKAE, LONG LIVE

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The versatile South African actor who starred on Broadway (he won a Tony Award in 1982 for his performance on Broadway in Athol Fugard’s “Master Harold and the Boys”) and in Hollywood films (he was brilliant in Euzhan Palzy’s “Dry White Season”) despite Apartheid, has died in Las Vegas.

From The New York Times obituary:

[Read more...]

“THE VERY BEST WARM HEART OF AFRICA”

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M.I.A.’s “Rain Dance” from the album, above.


[Via Steve; welcome Gemma]

VIDEO: “TO BE AFRICAN AND QUEER TODAY”

What it means to be a Black lesbian, to be a gay man or lesbian of any sort, in South Africa and on the continent more generally.

South African TV clip focusing on the work of photographer Zanele Muholi.

Via Dan Moshenberg

AFRICA AT NEW YORK FASHION WEEK

Featuring designers Lisa Fola­wiyo, Folake Folarin-Coker, Eric Raisina and David Tlale.

Sponsored by the glossy Nigerian magazine, ARISE.

Is this all worth it? Will North Americans and Europeans buy the clothes or does inclusion of African designers amount to a bit of “humanitarianism” on the part of New York Fashion Week?

“DO WE REALLY NEED ANOTHER MEMOIR BY A WHITE ZIMBABWEAN?”

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Alex Perry, in “Time” magazine, reviews the memoir of journalist Douglas Rogers, “The Last Resort.”

MUSIC BREAK: ‘DAEDELUS

Underground LA classic by Pigeon John and Busdriver.

THE SO-CALLED “RESOURCE CURSE”

The producers at Al Jazeera English’s “People and Power” program investigates the appropriation of profits from rich natural resources, mainly oil, by Congo-Brazzaville’s political leadership. The family of life President Denis Sassou Nguesso (he’s in power for 25 of the last 30 years and just “won” another seven year term). In the oil rich country (nearly 1 million barrels of oil worth $48 million sold in February this year), the majority of the population to live in poverty.

[Read more...]

“THE GAY HAIRDRESSER”

A journalist at the Dutch newspaper, Die Volkskrant, has a story about his barber who turns out to be a leading gay rights campaigner who had earlier fled Zimbabwe because of hysterical homophobia there and ended up in Amsterdam. (Narration in Dutch, but interview in English with Dutch subtitles.)

Link

“EVEN PEOPLE IN PARIS KNOW ABIDJAN IS WHERE IT’S AT”

Espoir 2000 with “Abidjan Farot.”

Via Things Seen and Heard.

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