294 research outputs found
Christianity, Sexuality and Citizenship in Africa: Critical Intersections
Citizenship in sub-Saharan Africa has undergone profound changes in recent decades as part of wider social and political dynamics. One notable development is the emergence of Christianity, especially in its Pentecostal-Charismatic forms, as a public religion. Christian actors, beliefs and practices have increasingly come to manifest themselves in the public sphere, actively engage with politics, define narratives of nationhood, and shape notions of citizenship. A second major development is the emergence of sexuality as a critical site of citizenship and nationhood in postcolonial Africa. On the one hand, many political and religious leaders are invested in a popular ideology of the heterosexual family as the basis of nation-building, while on the other hand, LGBT communities are becoming more visible and claim recognition from the state. The contributions to this special issue engage these two contrasting developments, examining the interconnections between Christianity, sexuality and citizenship empirically and theoretically through case studies in various African contexts and from several academic disciplines and critical perspectives
Citizenship of Love: The Politics, Ethics and Aesthetics of Sexual Citizenship in a Kenyan Gay Music Video
Against the background of the current politicisation of homosexuality and the policing of sexual citizenship in Kenya and other African countries, this article offers an analysis of the Kenyan gay music video Same Love, released by the band Art Attack in 2016. Employing the concept of acts of citizenship (Isin and Nielsen 2008), the article foregrounds the political, ethical and aesthetic aspects through which the lyrics and images of Same Love perform an act of sexual citizenship mediated through art. It argues that as an artistic intervention, the video interrogates popular narratives of homosexuality as un-Kenyan, un-African and un-Christian and creates a sense of a citizenship that is yet to come: a pan-African, Christian and queer citizenship of love. Thus, the article explores the new possibilities of cultural, sexual and religious citizenship created through popular culture and public space in contemporary Africa
Anacetrapib reduces progression of atherosclerosis, mainly by reducing non-HDL-cholesterol, improves lesion stability and adds to the beneficial effects of atorvastatin
The present study is the first intervention study in a well-established, translational mouse model for hyperlipidaemia and atherosclerosis showing that anacetrapib dose-dependently reduces atherosclerosis development and adds to the anti-atherogenic effects of atorvastatin. This effect is mainly ascribed to the reduction in non-HDL-C despite a remarkable increase in HDL-C and without affecting HDL functionality. In addition, anacetrapib improves lesion stabilit
Taking up the cudgels against gay rights? Trends and trajectories in African Christian theologies on homosexuality
Against the background of the HIV epidemic and the intense public controversy on homosexuality in African societies, this article investigates the discourses of academic African Christian theologians on homosexuality. Distinguishing some major strands in African theology, that is, inculturation, liberation, women’s and reconstruction theology, the article examines how the central concepts of culture, liberation, justice, and human rights function in these discourses. On the basis of a qualitative analysis of a large number of publications, the article shows that stances of African theologians are varying from silence and rejection to acceptance. Although many African theologians have taken up the cudgels against gay rights, some “dissident voices” break the taboo and develop more inclusive concepts of African identity and African Christianity
Search for short-lived axions in a nuclear isoscalar transition
Axions, if existing, can cause a strong signal of positron-electron pairs in isoscalar M1 transitions in competition with gamma-ray emission. We searched for such a signal in the 3.59 MeV transition in 10B with a fourfold Mini-Orange spectrometer. No axion events were found within two percent of the prediction for the standard axion- to Îł-ray branching ratio
Anomalous internal pair creation in Be-8 as a signature of the decay of a new particle
In a measurement of the angular correlation of e(+)e(-) pairs in the isovector M1 decay from 1(+) level at 17.64 MeV in Be-8, a large deviation was found from quantum electrodynamics(QED)-prediction for internal pair conversion (IPC). By postulating the emission of a neutral particle with a mass of 12 (2.5) MeV/c(2) the structure of the angular correlation can be described
Threonine utilization is high in the intestine of piglets
The whole-body threonine requirement in parenterally fed piglets is
substantially lower than that in enterally fed piglets, indicating that
enteral nutrition induces intestinal processes in demand of threonine. We
hypothesized that the percentage of threonine utilization for oxidation
and intestinal protein synthesis by the portal-drained viscera (PDV)
increases when dietary protein intake is reduced. Piglets (n = 18)
received isocaloric normal or protein-restricted diets. After 7 h of
enteral feeding, total threonine utilization, incorporation into
intestinal tissue, and oxidation by the PDV, were determined with stable
isotope methodology [U-(13)C threonine infusion]. Although the absolute
amount of systemic and dietary threonine utilized by the PDV was reduced
in protein-restricted piglets, the percentage of dietary threonine intake
utilized by the PDV did not differ between groups (normal protein 91% vs.
low protein 85%). The incorporation of dietary threonine into the proximal
jejunum was significantly different compared with the other intestinal
segments. Dietary, rather than systemic threonine was preferentially
utilized for protein synthesis in the small intestinal mucosa in piglets
that consumed the normal protein diet (P < 0.05). Threonine oxidation by
the PDV was limited during normal protein feeding. In protein-restricted
pigs, half of the total whole-body oxidation occurred in the PDV. We
conclude that, in vivo, the PDV have a high obligatory visceral
requirement for threonine. The high rate of intestinal threonine
utilization is due mainly to incorporation into mucosal protein
- …