chr 500-0bCHR Dark Textchr 500-0bchr 500-0b
  • About
    • Centre for Humanities Research
    • DSI-NRF Flagship
    • Partnerships
    • Funders
    • Reports
    • Staff
  • Iyatsiba Lab
    • LoKO
    • Sound Working Group
    • Documentary film
  • New Archival Visions
  • Research Platforms
    • Aesthetics and Politics
      • Factory of the Arts
        • About the Factory of the Arts
        • Convening the Factory of the Arts
        • Artists in Residence
      • Research Projects
    • Becoming Technical of the Human
      • Laboratory of Kinetic Objects
      • Research Projects
    • New Ecologies of the Subject
  • Research Chairs
    • NRF SARChI Chair in Visual History and Theory
      • Postgraduate bursaries and postdoctoral fellowships in Visual History & Theory
      • Postgraduate Module In Visual History, 2023 (HIS 735/835)
    • Charlotte Maxeke-Mary Robinson Research Chair
    • UK-SA Bilateral Digital humanities chair in culture and technics
  • Fellowship Programme
    • Fellows
    • Winter School
    • Visiting Scholars
    • Seminar Programme
  • Publications & Archive
    • Publications & Creative Outputs
    • Galleries
    • Video
    • Film
    • Podcast
  • News
    • Workshops
    • Conferences
    • Lectures
    • Special Meetings
    • Colloquia
    • Seminars
    • Arts Events
  • Contact
✕ When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to go to the desired page. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.
No results See all results

Sex and the Profane: FAKA, Abject Erotics, and the Politics of Deviance in post-apartheid South Africa

Assistant Professor Jordache Ellapen
University of Toronto

View the poster

A Lecture in the Humanities in Session Series at the Centre for Humanities Research


Assistant Professor Jordache Ellapen

University of Toronto

Sex and the Profane: FAKA, Abject Erotics, and the Politics of Deviance in post-apartheid South Africa


Date: Wednesday, 6 may 2019

Venue: Room 2, Centre for Humanities Research, University of the Western Cape

Time: 12h00 – 13h30


For more information

Please RSVP Micaela Felix at centreforhumanitiesresearch@uwc.ac.za

Bio


Jordache A. Ellapen is Assistant Professor of Feminist Studies in Culture and Media at the University of Toronto where he teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in the areas of visual culture studies, gender and sexuality studies, and race and racial formations in Africa and the diaspora. He received his Ph.D. in American Studies from Indiana University, Bloomington in 2015. Before joining the faculty at the University of Toronto, Jordache was assistant professor at the University of Oregon and a postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of African and African American Studies at Washington University in St. Louis. Jordache is the co-editor of the book we remember differently: Race, Memory, Imagination (2012) and a special issue of Black Camera: An International Film Journal on contemporary South African cinema (2018). He is currently completing a book manuscript tentatively titled Against Afronormativity: Queering Afro-Asian Intimacies, Sticky Erotics, and the Aesthetics of Race in South Africa.

Abstract


By examining the aesthetic practices of the black queer performance duo FAKA, this paper considers the importance of their performances of sex as art as disruptive aesthetic strategies that produces lines of flights away from the necropolitical underpinnings of the post-apartheid state. This paper is particularly interested in theorizing the imbrications of erotics and abjection in their performances and considers their use of negative affects of feces, femininity, bottomhood, and unbelonging as sites through which they actively craft counterintuitive forms of sociality and modes of belonging.  In their performances, funk and fuck merge to produce a distinctly black African queer feminist politics that they refer to as Siyakaka feminism. Siyakaka feminism emphasizes both the disruptive and generative nature of the erotic, where pleasure in abjection shifts the erotic from power to force. Embracing transgressive pleasure, FAKA actives the political, re-scripting the black/African body into an alternative site of knowledge production emphasizing “embodied knowledge” as a decolonial praxis.  Building on black and African feminists and queer of color critique this paper analyzes FAKA’s “politics of deviance” as a strategy that disrupts the ways in which black/African bodies are captured within the heteronormative gaze, foregrounding the paradoxes of freedom in South Africa, especially for black African queer subjects. This paper considers the relationship between aesthetics and politics and in so doing unpacks how the post-apartheid nation-state’s project of heteronormativity is intimately connected to authentic and nativist formations of blackness.

RSVP here:


Share
1

Related posts

Zine-making workshop: Something like an archive – Exploring memory through zine-making


Read more

Exhibition Opening: Tales of History Retold


Read more

Artists’s Forum with Kemang Wa Lehulere


Read more

The Polyrhythmic Ensemble


Read more

Search

✕ When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to go to the desired page. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.

Sign Up to our newsletter


Stay up to date with the latest news and developments from the Centre for Humanities Research.




Recent Media

  • ENGAGE/REFLECT/CREATE: The CHR-Encounters Documentary Series
    August 19, 2025
  • Exhibition opening: And I, a newly evolved fish.
    July 25, 2025
  • Holding a Thought – The puppetry of Ukwanda
    July 18, 2025
Centre for Humanities Research

2 weeks ago

Centre for Humanities Research
Please join us for 'Together Apart The Irish Anti-Apartheid Movement', which will be given by Daryl Hendley Rooney as part of the Charlotte Maxeke-Mary Robinson Research Chair. This lecture draws upon the IAAM Archive held at UWC and reflects the ongoing research and development undertaken for the exhibition, Together Apart: The Irish-Anti Apartheid Movement, a partnership of the Little Museum and the University of the Western Cape. Together Apart will open at the Little Museum in spring 2026 for six months before moving to Cape Town. ... See MoreSee Less

Photo

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Centre for Humanities Research

2 weeks ago

Centre for Humanities Research
The 2025 International Workshop on Visual History & Theory will take place between October 14-15 and includes two keynotes which are open to the public. The second instalment, 'An Archive and Forms of Sight: Gestures of Madness " by Nancy Rose Hunt will take places on Wednesday 15 October. ... See MoreSee Less

Photo

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Centre for Humanities Research

2 weeks ago

Centre for Humanities Research
The 2025 International Workshop on Visual History & Theory will take place between October 14-15, and includes two keynotes which are open to the public. The first, 'In Black Women’s Hands: A History of Gestures in Photography and Textile', will be given by Sandrine Colard and Giulia Paoletti, and takes place on Tuesday 14 October.Venue: CHR’s Iyatsiba Lab, 66 Greatmore Street, Woodstock (enter via Regent Road)Time: 9:30am-11:00am ... See MoreSee Less

Photo

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Centre for Humanities Research

3 weeks ago

Centre for Humanities Research
Please join us on Thursday 16 October for a screening of Dublin Short, a short documentary capturing the magic of the Little Museum of Dublin’s famous guided tour. The screening will be followed by a Q&A with Dr Daryl Hendley Rooney, deputy curator at the Little Museum and visiting researcher on the Charlotte Maxeke-Mary Robinson Research Chair.Date: Thursday 16 October 2025Time: 15h00-16h30Venue: The CHR’s Iyatsiba Lab,66 Greatmore Street, Woodstock(enter via Regent St) ... See MoreSee Less

Photo

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Centre for Humanities Research

1 month ago

Centre for Humanities Research
We are pleased to announce that Premesh Lalu 's Undoing Apartheid has been translated into Turkic and published as part of the Afrika Vakfi Yayinlan series... ... See MoreSee Less

Photo

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Research Platforms

  • NRF SARChI Chair in Visual History and Theory
  • Andrew W. Mellon Chair of Aesthetic Theory and Material Performance
  • Factory of the Arts
  • Laboratory of Kinetic Objects
  • Seminar Programme
  • Publications

Recently Added

  • Zine-making workshop: Something like an archive – Exploring memory through zine-making
    October 24, 2025
  • Exhibition Opening: Tales of History Retold
    October 22, 2025
  • Artists’s Forum with Kemang Wa Lehulere
    October 21, 2025
✕ When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to go to the desired page. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER


Stay up to date with the latest news and developments from the Centre for Humanities Research.



© 2025 UWC | The Centre for Humanities Research. All Rights Reserved. Designed By Spotkolours Design
No results See all results