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She called me woman : Nigeria's queer women speak

Contributor(s): Publisher: Abuja : Cassava Republic, 2018Description: 357p. ; 22 cmISBN:
  • 9781911115595
Subject(s): NLM classification:
  • WM 645
Summary: She Called Me Woman is a collection of first-hand accounts by a community telling their stories on their own terms. This engaging and groundbreaking collection of queer women's narratives includes stories of first time love and curiosity, navigating same-sex feelings and spirituality, growing up gender non-conforming and overcoming family and society's expectations. What does it means to be a queer Nigerian? How does one embrace the label of `woman'? While some tell of self-acceptance, others talk of friendship and building a home in the midst of the anti-same sex marriage law. The narrators range from those who knew they were gay from a very early age to those who discovered their attraction to the same sex later in life. The stories challenge the stereotypes of what we assume is lesbian, bisexual, gay, and *trans in Nigeria and they offer us a raw, first-hand look into the lives and realities of our family, friends, neighbours and co-workers who are queer.
List(s) this item appears in: SLaM Library books for International Women’s Day and beyond | SLAM Library LGBTQ+ books | SLaM Library Black History Month and anti-racism books | SLaM Library Celebrating Black Women Books (Black History Month 2023)
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Item type Home library Collection Class number Status Date due Barcode
Book South London and Maudsley Trust Library Shelves People & planet ZZ 3 SHE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 023173

Formerly CIP.

She Called Me Woman is a collection of first-hand accounts by a community telling their stories on their own terms. This engaging and groundbreaking collection of queer women's narratives includes stories of first time love and curiosity, navigating same-sex feelings and spirituality, growing up gender non-conforming and overcoming family and society's expectations. What does it means to be a queer Nigerian? How does one embrace the label of `woman'? While some tell of self-acceptance, others talk of friendship and building a home in the midst of the anti-same sex marriage law. The narrators range from those who knew they were gay from a very early age to those who discovered their attraction to the same sex later in life. The stories challenge the stereotypes of what we assume is lesbian, bisexual, gay, and *trans in Nigeria and they offer us a raw, first-hand look into the lives and realities of our family, friends, neighbours and co-workers who are queer.

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