Chappell Paul
a Department of Anthropology and Development Studies , University of Johannesburg , Johannesburg , South Africa.
Cult Health Sex. 2014;16(9):1156-68. doi: 10.1080/13691058.2014.933878. Epub 2014 Jul 18.
Popular socio-medical discourses surrounding the sexuality of disabled people have tended to subjugate young people with disabilities as de-gendered and asexual. As a result, very little attention has been given to how young people with disabilities in the African context construct their sexual identities. Based on findings from a participatory research study conducted amongst Zulu-speaking youth with physical and visual disabilities in KwaZulu-Natal, this paper argues that young people with disabilities are similar to other non-disabled youth in the way they construct their sexual identities. Using a post-structural framework, it outlines how the young participants construct discursive truths surrounding disability, culture and gender through their discussions of love and relationships. In this context, it is argued that the sexual identities' of young people with physical and visual disabilities actually emerges within the intersectionality of identity discourses.
围绕残疾人 sexuality 的流行社会医学话语往往将残疾青年视为无性别和无性的群体。因此,对于非洲背景下的残疾青年如何构建他们的性身份,很少有人关注。基于在夸祖鲁 - 纳塔尔省对讲祖鲁语的身体和视力残疾青年进行的一项参与式研究的结果,本文认为残疾青年在构建他们的性身份方面与其他非残疾青年相似。运用后结构框架,它概述了年轻参与者如何通过对爱情和关系的讨论构建围绕残疾、文化和性别的话语真相。在这种背景下,有人认为身体和视力残疾青年的性身份实际上是在身份话语的交叉性中出现的。