Countering Illegibility: Religion, Ethnicity and Sexuality in Public Debates and Lived Experience in Belgium
Publication date
2018
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Abstract
In this article, I set out to explore various intersectional social constructions of ethnicity, religion and sexuality. First, I conduct an analysis of recent public controversies in Flanders (Belgium) about women’s and (homo)sexual equality as set against religious authorities and religious-ethnic minorities. It reveals how dominant understandings of ethnicity, sexuality and religion are constructed, reinforced and, if needed, defended. Second, I foreground a critical counter-voice negotiating these what I call ‘ethno-sexular’ boundary constructions. I analyse the lived experiences of Hajar, a volunteer of an antiracist LGBTQI organisation located in Brussels, and argue that because of a dominant ethno-sexular discourse, Hajar’s hybrid identifications and critical voice is made illegible in much of her social environment.
Keywords
Religion-secularity, ethnicity, sexuality, public discourse, counter-voice
Citation
van den Brandt, H P 2018, 'Countering Illegibility : Religion, Ethnicity and Sexuality in Public Debates and Lived Experience in Belgium', Culture and Religion, vol. 19, no. 1, pp. 62-89. https://doi.org/10.1080/14755610.2017.1413409