Abstract
This case study from Dakar, Senegal, suggests that gender and sexual identities in Africa reveal more diversity than typically suggested in the literature on sexuality and AIDS in Africa. Furthermore, this flexibility indicates a greater variety of sexual behaviors than the extensive prior work on heterosexual transmission of HIV suggests. Secrecy is a key to understanding the variation; much diversity is not obvious because it is kept from public scrutiny. Long-term ethnographic investigations of sexual identities and behavior are invaluable to discovering and interpreting this diversity in African societies.
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Teunis, N. Same-Sex Sexuality in Africa: A Case Study from Senegal. AIDS Behav 5, 173–182 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1011335129358
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1011335129358