Beginning Wednesday, July 1 at 8:30 a.m. Central Time, you will not be able to log in or create an account while we transition to our new student portal. Access is expected to be restored by the end of the day on Monday, July 6.

If you have started any forms in your MyIESabroad student portal, please complete and submit them by end of day Tuesday, June 30. Submitted forms will carry over automatically. Any forms that are started but not submitted by June 30 will not transfer—but don't worry, you'll still have access to the same forms in the new portal on July 6.

For more details, please review our student system upgrade information. Want a heads-up when the new portal is live? Fill out our interest form. Thank you for your patience during this transition. We're excited to welcome you into the new portal and continue supporting you every step of the way.

AN/GS/WS 215 - Intersectional Perspectives on Sexuality & Gender in Africa

The purpose of this course is to familiarize students and critically engage with the various ways of theorizing and understanding gender and sexuality – from traditional and popular theories of gender and sexual development to theories that actively challenge these dominant ways of understanding gender and sexuality. This course will take a social constructionist perspective, to explore the ways in which gender and sexual identities are socially constructed, rather than innate or biological, and the implications of these constructions on our everyday lived experiences within a South African context. Specifically, this course will explore the ideology of heteronormativity and how heteronormative ideas around sexuality and gender mean that we are socialized to become particular kinds of gendered and sexual beings and that there are social, cultural, and political consequences when we do not.

Therefore, through critical engagement with numerous debates around gender and sexuality, this course will explore the implications of a binary view of gender and sexuality, and the way in which certain beliefs and norms about ‘women’ and ‘men’ are contributing factors to the pervasive nature of gender and sexual violence in South Africa. This course will also take an intersectional approach in exploring ideas around gender and sexuality since gender and sexuality cannot be viewed in isolation. In other words, our understanding of and beliefs about gender and sexuality are dependent on various intersecting identities such as culture, race, religion, nationality, geographical location, ability, and so on.

Course Information

Discipline(s):

Anthropology
Gender Studies
Women's Studies

Term(s) Offered:

Fall
Spring

Credits:

3

Language of instruction:

English

Contact Hours:

45

The World is Your Classroom

Take courses at our Centers abroad, directly enroll at a local partner university, or build a schedule with courses from both. Use the Course Finder to explore all the courses offered at our IES Abroad Centers. Additional course options at prestigious local universities are available on the program page and partner university websites.

Browse Our Courses