I. Niehaus, Towards a dubious liberation: Masculinity, sexuality and power in South African lowveld schools, 1953-1999, J S AFR ST, 26(3), 2000, pp. 387-407
This article investigates how masculine sexuality featured as a political i
ssue during the liberation struggle in Impalahoek, a village on the South A
frican lowveld. The starting point of my analysis is the repressive regime
in primary and high schools during the period of Bantu Education, from 1953
to 1986. I show that whilst teachers strictly prohibited and harshly punis
hed all forms of sexuality between students, male teachers freely engaged i
n sexual liaisons with schoolgirls. The revolt by Comrades in the schools b
etween 1986 and 1992 was inspired in part by students' discontent about sex
uality. Comrades demanded an end to corporal punishment, expelled teachers
who engaged in sex with schoolgirls and celebrated their ol-vn sexual viril
ity bz a local campaign to 'build soldiers'. Since 1994, the management of
sexuality by the African National Congress (ANC)-led government has not ina
ugurated sexual liberation. Rather, sex education and new medical discourse
s about sexuality in the era of AIDS have generated new forms of surveillan
ce and contestation. Such historical experiences inform the links between d
emocratisation and changing notions of sexuality in South Africa.