Examining gendered discourses from an African locale: towards an intrasectional feminist critical discourse analysis
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Critical Discourse Studies
Abstract
Following calls for transnational and decolonial perspectives in
[feminist]CDA, this paper considers what it means to do a critical
analysis of gendered discourses from a Global Southern
perspective. It highlights how discourses from an African locale,
with its complex local-global intra-action, provide another
instance of the complexity of discursive and identitarian power in
late modernity, arguing that this requires an intrasectional (not
intersectional) feminist critical discourse analysis. Gendered
discourses in a music video from hip-life, a localized hip-hop
genre in Ghana, are examined to illustrate this argument. The
analysis shows how the specific context examined recalibrates
not just the social categories that often underlie feminist
intersectional analysis but also gives us a complex view of power
that interrogates CDA’s emphasis on top-down approaches to
power, a binary conceptualization that does not account for the
manifestations of the power-powerlessness dialectic within the
same subject. The result is significant for both analysis and
activism because a comprehensive global program for social
transformation that includes non-Western contexts and their re visioning of our analytical lenses must attend to their rhizomic
discursive-material entanglements if they are to be effective.
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To cite this article: Nancy Henaku (2023): Examining gendered discourses from an African locale: towards an intrasectional feminist critical discourse analysis, Critical Discourse Studies, DOI: 10.1080/17405904.2023.2230601