Poetry, Religion, and Empowerment in Nigerian Lesbian Self-Writing

The Nigerian LGBT community is nearly invisible and mostly functions underground or through pseudonyms, in spite of the emerging visibility of queer writing in recent times. As a Nigerian lesbian woman and writer, in this article I seek to analyse some of my queer poems through an auto-ethnographic...

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Main Author: Unoma Azuah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UJ Press 2019-07-01
Series:African Journal of Gender and Religion (AJGR)
Online Access:https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/ajgr/article/view/893
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author Unoma Azuah
author_facet Unoma Azuah
author_sort Unoma Azuah
collection DOAJ
description The Nigerian LGBT community is nearly invisible and mostly functions underground or through pseudonyms, in spite of the emerging visibility of queer writing in recent times. As a Nigerian lesbian woman and writer, in this article I seek to analyse some of my queer poems through an auto-ethnographic lens. While providing a brief history of contemporary Nigerian queer writings, their beginnings, their struggles, and their growth, even in the midst of their attacks, I will focus on and draw upon specific ex-periences as narrated in some of my poems, to explore how the religious constructions of my life and the lives of LGBT Nigerians can both limit and empower us. Through my experiences and the sharing of these involve-ments, I hope to be a part of the process that dismantles the religious block of homophobia that crushes us, and to reclaim religious language and imagery as a site of empowerment. Through my poetic testimonies, I liberate myself and, hopefully, my queer community.
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spelling doaj-art-ef50db6ea8fb4df4b658c79a91e55e372025-08-20T02:45:06ZengUJ PressAfrican Journal of Gender and Religion (AJGR)2707-29912019-07-0125110.14426/ajgr.v25i1.893Poetry, Religion, and Empowerment in Nigerian Lesbian Self-WritingUnoma Azuah0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3078-0197Wiregrass Georgia Technical CollegeThe Nigerian LGBT community is nearly invisible and mostly functions underground or through pseudonyms, in spite of the emerging visibility of queer writing in recent times. As a Nigerian lesbian woman and writer, in this article I seek to analyse some of my queer poems through an auto-ethnographic lens. While providing a brief history of contemporary Nigerian queer writings, their beginnings, their struggles, and their growth, even in the midst of their attacks, I will focus on and draw upon specific ex-periences as narrated in some of my poems, to explore how the religious constructions of my life and the lives of LGBT Nigerians can both limit and empower us. Through my experiences and the sharing of these involve-ments, I hope to be a part of the process that dismantles the religious block of homophobia that crushes us, and to reclaim religious language and imagery as a site of empowerment. Through my poetic testimonies, I liberate myself and, hopefully, my queer community.https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/ajgr/article/view/893
spellingShingle Unoma Azuah
Poetry, Religion, and Empowerment in Nigerian Lesbian Self-Writing
African Journal of Gender and Religion (AJGR)
title Poetry, Religion, and Empowerment in Nigerian Lesbian Self-Writing
title_full Poetry, Religion, and Empowerment in Nigerian Lesbian Self-Writing
title_fullStr Poetry, Religion, and Empowerment in Nigerian Lesbian Self-Writing
title_full_unstemmed Poetry, Religion, and Empowerment in Nigerian Lesbian Self-Writing
title_short Poetry, Religion, and Empowerment in Nigerian Lesbian Self-Writing
title_sort poetry religion and empowerment in nigerian lesbian self writing
url https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/ajgr/article/view/893
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