Intimate Activism by Cymene Howe
Intimate Activism by Cymene Howe
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in Postrevolutionary Nicaragua
Cymene Howe
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Acknowledgments ix
Introduction
The Struggle 1
1. A History of Sexuality 23
2. Intimate Pedagogies 61
Conclusion
Getting the Word Out 160
Notes 173
References 197
Index 221
Acknowledgments
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Acknowledgments
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x
panionship. I thank them all: Florence Babb, Jodi Barnes, Andrew Bick-
ford, Evelyn Blackwood, Katherine Bliss, Yarimar Bonilla, Dominic Boyer,
Hector Carrillo, Jane Fajans, James Faubion, Melissa Fisher, Katherine
Frank, William French, Nia Georges, Victoria González-Rivera, Rosemary
Hennessey, Gilbert Herdt, Nell Haynes, Sarah Horton, William Leap, Paul
Liffman, Lois Lorentzen, Jeffrey Mantz, Michelle Marzullo, Linda Mayo,
Lavinia Nicolae, Ratheesh Radhikrishna, Margaret Randall, Brian Riedel,
Susan Terrio, Niels Teunis, Deborah Tolman, Terry Turner, Jennifer Ty-
burczy, Marike van Gijsel, David Vine, and Thomas Walker. The partici-
pants in the Mellon Faculty Seminar at Cornell University (2005–2006,
2006–2007), as well as all of the participants in the Sexuality Studies
Working Group at Rice University, have my appreciation for their com-
mentaries and enthusiasm. The many students with whom I have had the
pleasure of working over the past few years also deserve accolades for the
ways in which they have shaped this book through their excellent ques-
tions and clarifications. They have pushed me to create a lucid text out of
what is, for me, an immensely compelling story that my Nicaraguan inter-
locutors have lived.
Financial support, as we all know, is absolutely crucial to fieldwork
and to our ability to carry out research and write. I am grateful to the Ful-
bright Foundation, the National Women’s Studies Association, and the
Mellon Foundation for their remunerative support of this project. The in-
stitutions at which I have worked over the past handful of years also have
contributed to field excursions and supported my ability to develop this
project and the book itself; thanks are due to American University, Cor-
nell University, Rice University, San Francisco State University, and the
University of New Mexico. This manuscript has seen a lot of locales, and
I believe little epistemic bits of Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Ithaca,
Albuquerque, and Houston, and of course Managua, are woven into the
text itself.
Anonymous reviewers at Cultural Anthropology, City and Society, glq,
the Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology, and Duke Uni-
versity Press have provided productive and engaged comments on this
text as it has developed and matured. I appreciate their time, intelligence,
and close readings of the manuscript in various stages. Sue Deeks pro-
vided excellent, detailed copyediting on the manuscript, and Liz Smith,
Sara Leone, Naomi Linzer and Amy Buchanan also have my deepest ap-
preciation for the work they have done bringing this book to press. Ken
Acknowledgments
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xi
Wissoker definitely deserves recognition and then some for guiding this
project to completion. His support and cheerful e-mails have meant a lot.
My utmost thanks go to my mom and dad for their overall support of
me as a fledgling being and of course their willingness to hear yet one
more report about Nicaraguan sexual rights activists. Barbara and John
Boyer have also been an important source of support and encouragement
to me; it is good to have writers in the family, if only to know that there is
always a sympathetic wordsmith nearby. Melissa Abrams, Brenda Maiale,
and Rocky Patten should also count themselves among the most appreci-
ated friends, correspondents, and people mentioned here.
Finally, I reserve one last thank you—one that is not really captured by
the concept of an “acknowledgment.” And that is for the love of my life.
You know who you are.
Acknowledgments
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xii
Introduction
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—
The Struggle
Introduction
—
2
programs and films, increased flows of digital information, and people’s
migratory paths between the global North and Nicaragua. Nicaraguan
advocates for sexual rights have also played an instrumental role in how
same-sex sexuality is coming to be understood in both public culture and
private interactions. In this book I follow the work of Nicaraguan sexual
rights activists who, I argue, have served as key mediators in the transfor-
mation of ideas about, and experiences of, same-sex sexuality. Activists’
interventions have grown out of a political and intellectual commitment
to combine human rights, identity politics, and global discourses with the
quotidian realities of sexuality that are specific to Nicaragua. In an era
in which political practices—from communitarian impulses to liberal
rights—move rapidly across borders, understanding activists as a class of
mediators who actively craft and situate political ideals allows us to under-
stand not only activists’ values and the settings of their struggles but also
the points of “friction” (Tsing 2004) at which globally disseminated rights
and concepts of sexuality become reformulated in local contexts.
Nicaragua’s Sandinista Revolution (1979–90) was one of very few suc-
cessful social revolutions in Latin America. It brought together strands of
Marxism, nationalism, and liberation theology to overturn the country’s
long-standing dictatorial regime. Because of the Sandinista experiment,
Nicaragua was an iconic example of a “third world” country that dared to
challenge U.S. hegemony in the final chilly years of the Cold War. What
is perhaps less well known is that in 1992, during the U.S.-supported ad-
ministration of President Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, Nicaragua insti-
tuted Article 204, the most repressive antisodomy law in the Americas.
Article 204 mandated up to three years imprisonment for “anyone who
induces, promotes, propagandizes or practices in scandalous form sexual
intercourse between persons of the same sex.” It targeted not only men
but also women. It was a law that threatened to incarcerate, potentially,
anyone who wrote about, spoke about, or putatively propagandized the
subject of homosexuality in any way. By the time the Sandinistas returned
to power in 2006, Nicaragua was the only country in Latin America that
criminalized same-sex sexual relations between consenting adults, male
or female. Then, in 2007, in what a prominent Nicaraguan national news-
paper called “a surprise decision,” the antisodomy law was repealed. Why
Nicaragua “surprisingly” moved from an oppressive antisodomy regime to
greater tolerance for same-sex sexuality remains, officially, an open ques-
tion.1 This book is an attempt to provide a partial answer by considering
The Struggle
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3
the work of Nicaraguan sexual rights advocates whose campaigns were
largely spurred by the antisodomy law, but whose activism has attempted
to change not only policy but also culture. From my point of view, activists
deserve credit and congratulations for the work they have done to over-
turn the antisodomy law. However, this book is not simply a celebratory
reflection on a hard-won victory.
Rather than a retrospective of a successful social movement, this book
is an ethnography of activism. It considers the intellectual and performa-
tive practices of advocates to better understand how they are attempting
to transform culture through political means, from the inside, out. Sexual
rights activists see themselves as participants in what they call una lucha
(a struggle) to transform la vida cotidiana (daily life). The lucha for sexual
rights, I argue, illustrates a pivotal moment in a continuum from revo-
lution to rights as many activists who were revolutionaries, or who were
influenced by the revolution’s spirit, are now committed to more identity-
based human rights projects. Their struggle for sexual rights illustrates
some of the ways in which political objectives have changed from a revo-
lutionary impulse to overturn the state to a set of political values aimed
at protecting individuals from the state, and from national upheaval to a
politics of personal transformation and securing rights.
As Nicaraguan activists have attempted to transform the moral terrain
at home, many of them have looked beyond the country’s borders to en-
gage in a now global conversation about sexual rights.2 Like many politi-
cal actors, Nicaraguan activists are influenced by concepts of sexual sub-
jectivity, ideals of romantic love, and international lesbian and gay rights
movements. These political models, inherited from Enlightenment ideals
of rational mutual understanding, are symptomatic of what Elizabeth Po-
vinelli (2004: 6) has called the “liberal diaspora.”3 A liberal logic of rights
and movements has been persuasive in Nicaragua’s postrevolutionary,
neoliberal economic climate and has, in part, set the stage for cultural
and political reconfigurations of sexuality. However, activists have not
been bound by these logics. Instead, they have translated aspects of the
country’s revolutionary ethos into terms commensurate with the contem-
porary politics of sexual rights, often reconfiguring trans-local political
practices so they resonate more profoundly with local political histories
and priorities. The Nicaraguan struggle for sexual rights is, I believe, dis-
tinct from many other sexual equality movements around the world not
only because activists have had to confront a formidable antisodomy law,
Introduction
—
4
but also because activists themselves come armed with organizing experi-
ences learned, and earned, during the revolutionary process. Just as the
Sandinista Revolution was a mixture of political, social, and religious prin-
ciples, sexual rights activists have developed a similar kind of bricolage,
creatively appropriating and engaging a hybrid set of political approaches.
Nicaraguan sexual rights activists articulate their politics in multiple
ways as they attempt to engage with the public and create a public sphere
that recognizes and appreciates the values of sexual rights. Lesbian and
gay discussion groups, public protests and street demonstrations, and
social-justice radio and television programming are important arenas for
advocacy, each representing a different dimension and scale of engage-
ment. These are key sites of activists’ interventions. However, equally im-
portant is the work that advocates do to create a subject for sexual rights.
Whether on the street or on the airwaves, activists must calibrate their
politics for their audience, the people of Nicaragua, as well as for each
other. The debates that take place behind the scenes as activists prepare
for public events and produce media materials, for instance, are not only
illustrative of content, messaging, and strategizing; they also demonstrate
how ideological negotiations inflect and inform the work that activists do.
Conversations about how, or whether, to use particular political tropes—
including declaración (outness), identity, sexual “options” or “orienta-
tions,” “pride,” or “sexuality free from prejudice”—become an experimen-
tal terrain for advocates to refashion and reposition transnational political
values and notions of subjectivity. Translating the terms associated with
sexuality, and the uneven ways they index identity and behavior, is not
simply a linguistic exercise but also a conceptual one.4 These mediations,
perhaps unsurprisingly, often have a gendered dimension. The contingen-
cies of machismo, changing perceptions of women’s sexual agency, and
the social inequalities between women and men all indicate, in profound
ways, how sexual subjectivity cannot be divorced from gender.
Although this book describes sexual rights activism on behalf of both
women and men in Nicaragua, I focus somewhat more attention on dere-
chos lesbianos (lesbian rights). In one sense, my subjectivity and the many
years I spent in the “dyke scene” in California guided this decision.5 As a
(bisexual) woman, I also probably had more access to the social world of
lesbian politics than I would have had as a man (or, conversely, as a woman
attempting to access the intimate domains of men’s same-sex sexuality in
Nicaragua). However, there is a more primary, political, and “Nica” rea-
The Struggle
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5
son behind my focus on derechos lesbianos. While Nicaraguans have long
been aware of la cochona, women’s same-sex sexuality has never had the
same degree of recognition as men’s same-sex sexuality. La cochona has
never been as visible as el cochón in Nicaraguan public culture. When
sexual rights activists lobby for derechos lesbianos, they are therefore not
only calling attention to a relatively new sexual subject in Nicaragua, the
lesbian, but they are also highlighting the existence of women’s same-sex
sexuality as such.
The sexual rights advocates whose work and aspirations are reflected
here are a diverse group; some are grassroots activists, and others are em-
ployed by nongovernmental organizations (ngos), health clinics, or other
social service agencies.6 During my field research, I spent time with street
protestors and feminist thinkers, university students and hiv-prevention
educators, spectators of queer cinema and radio show hosts, discussion
group participants and pride party attendees, soap opera screenwriters
and attorneys who were well versed in the vicissitudes of human rights,
sexual identity, and Nicaraguan law. Many sexual rights advocates were
long-time Sandinista militantes, and others were neoliberal converts. Most
were Nicaraguan, but a handful were foreign nationals and expatriates,
some of whom had lived in Nicaragua since the revolutionary era.7 I also
spent much of my time in Nicaragua with people who were known around
the neighborhood as a cochón or a cochona and who increasingly were re-
ferring to themselves as gay (or homosexual) and lesbiana.8 Participating
in meetings of the Women’s Network against Violence, helping to plan
the weeklong Sexuality Free from Prejudice (sffp) events, joining les-
bian discussion groups, attending hiv/aids-prevention events, and help-
ing to create a database of Latin American gay and lesbian organizations
all inform my understanding of sexual rights advocacy in Nicaragua. My
networks and contacts expanded and deepened over time through over-
lapping personal and professional connections, or what social scientists
like to call “snowball” sampling, although snowballs seem a strange meth-
odological metaphor in the tropical swelter of Managua.
There were days when I shared pinolillo, a traditional drink made of
corn and cacao, with my Nicaraguan friends and coworkers; but my con-
versations most often occurred over well-sugared lukewarm coffee. I was
also more likely to hear the best anecdotes and the bawdier details after
the bottle of Flor de Caña rum had gone around the table a couple of times
and the Shakira song had subsided on the speakers at the disco gay. In the
Introduction
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6
relatively small world of activist networks, ngos, social service agencies,
and health centers in Managua, an interloping gringa is not unheard of.9
The country has a long history of internacionalistas, both those who came
during the revolutionary period and those who continue to arrive in sup-
port of development projects around the country.10 My initial experiences
in Nicaragua, living in a small town in the western highlands in the early
1990s, inspired my interest in sexual rights activism in the country. How-
ever, most of what I describe in this book derives from daily conversations
and interactions with people during sixteen months of field research in
1999, 2000, and 2001, followed by several trips back since then, including
as an international elections observer in 2006 when the Sandinistas re-
turned to power. During the time that this field research took place, it was
illegal to promote, propagandize, or practice homosexuality in Nicara-
gua. However, this is precisely what many activists were doing. To ensure
complete confidentiality, I have used pseudonyms for all of the individu-
als whose stories and words are included here.11 While Article 204 is no
longer in effect and I do not expect any of the people represented in this
book to be legally or personally endangered in the present, I have chosen
to err on the side of caution for the sake of my friends and interlocutors.
Maintaining this confidentiality is a long-standing anthropological con-
vention, but it is also one that, in this case, seems especially warranted.
The Struggle
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7
receiving more development aid per capita than any other country in the
Americas. As one Nicaraguan diplomat put it in our conversation, “Our
country is forced to go begging to the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund.” Once a globally recognized symbol of revolution and
resistance, Nicaragua had taken on a new “identity” as the second poor-
est country in the Western Hemisphere. Stranded on the margins of the
global economy, Nicaraguan activists have had to craft their advocacy
campaigns with limited resources, at best.
In response to deepening social conservatism and structural adjust-
ment policies that made the Nicaraguan state much less able, and seem-
ingly less willing, to provide even a modicum of social welfare, many social
justice activists established new political venues in civil society. Gender
and sexual rights activists founded an influential women’s movement, the
Movimiento Autónomo de Mujeres (Autonomous Women’s Movement),
national networks for violence prevention, grassroots initiatives for sexual
rights, and organizations dedicated to hiv/aids prevention and educa-
tion. In the early 1990s, the country underwent what Nicaraguans call
el boom of ngos, which became increasingly responsible for clinical ser-
vices such as reproductive and sexual health and assumed many politi-
cal tasks, including lobbying for human rights and social justice agendas
(Molyneux 2003; Paley 2002, 2008). The politics of social transformation
became, to a degree, institutionalized in ngos, many of which have been
dependent on the good graces of foreign governments, foundations, and
nonprofit organizations for their funding. In this economically precarious
situation, activists are acutely aware that their projects are vulnerable to
the capriciousness of foreign capital. At the same time, they are also ada-
mant that their projects remain their own; many advocates are vocal about
the fact that their foreign support comes “with no strings attached.” The
fact that some activists’ projects are funded and deemed worthy while
other projects are not, however, suggests that financial strings are inher-
ent in a context in which economic dependence is the starting point for
political projects.
Opposing the antisodomy law has been an ongoing battle for many
activists, but sexual rights advocates also see themselves as struggling
against what they call fundamentalismo cristiano (Christian fundamen-
talism). Fundamentalismo cristiano appears in anti-abortion campaigns
by religious institutions, biased sexual education in schools, “fiscal ter-
rorism” against women’s organizations,13 and attacks on the leadership of
Introduction
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8
health clinics and progressive ngos. The majority of Nicaraguans identify
as Catholic, and the church has an enormous amount of influence in Nica-
raguan politics and public opinion. Public commentaries by representa-
tives of the Catholic church are regularly featured in the national news-
papers, and Nicaraguan Catholic clergy historically have functioned as
key arbiters in national politics.14 Evangelical denominations, which have
grown across the country, also leverage ideological and moral influence
in the country. Church doctrine that designates homosexuality sinful, and
the widely held opinion among Nicaraguans that homosexuality is a sick-
ness, have both proved to be difficult obstacles in activists’ work.
Antisodomy laws and powerful church lobbies do not, however, tell the
whole story of sexuality in contemporary Nicaragua. The weekly magazine
Salud y Sexualidad (Health and Sexuality), a colorful insert in the national
newspaper El Nuevo Diario (New Daily), often runs features on sexuality,
including same-sex sexuality, making these topics a regular part of quo-
tidian dialogues.15 Political scandals, such as the accusations of incest and
rape leveled against (former and current) President Daniel Ortega by his
adopted stepdaughter, offer salient, if salacious, moments for the body
politic to reflect on sexuality as a social and political phenomenon. Popu-
lar television shows featuring gay characters, such as Betty la Fea (Ugly
Betty), have opened new spaces to discuss sexuality, if in stereotyped
forms. Increasing access to the Internet has meant that (primarily urban)
Nicaraguans can find material about sexual behavior, health, and rights
from around the world. Changes such as these have allowed some Nicara-
guans to claim lesbian, gay, or homosexual identities in very public, vocal,
and visible ways. Others have depended on tacit recognition, claiming in-
stead, “I am neither in the closet nor on the balcony” (Babb 2003, 2009).
There are still others who are cuidadosa (careful, mindful) and perhaps
even suspicious of sexual-identity categories and the meanings they are
believed to embody. This book closely considers these dynamics, assess-
ing the ways in which the ongoing work of sexual rights activists has trans-
formed how Nicaraguans talk about and perhaps, think about sexuality.
The Struggle
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9
Antonio Gramsci’s Prison Notebooks made it seem as though the revolu-
tion was not that far gone. By the time I returned to do fieldwork in the
late 1990s and early 2000s, the intellectual heroes of aspiring communists
were much less a part of the public repertoire. When political theory did
arise, it was no longer people in the street who did most of the talking.
Instead, an educated, progressive, and often middle-class cohort of politi-
cal actors was engaged in these conversations, and the theory I was be-
ginning to hear was Foucault’s. Ernesto, a member of the Men’s Network
against Violence, put it this way one afternoon, “You see, Cymene, it is
like Foucault says: power moves in incremental ways, moves in language,
and it is all about discourse.” Times had changed and they had stayed the
same: Nicaragua was still a country actively engaged with social theory,
but the theoretical repertoire had changed, as had the subject of political
struggles.16
The ways in which Nicaragua has moved from Marx and Foucault to
liberal paradigms and human rights illustrate not only how the country
as a whole has engaged with political theorizing and practice, but also
how advocates themselves—their interventions and their thinking—have
been influenced by them. Partially due to the relatively short time hori-
zon between the Sandinista Revolution and other struggles for equality in
Nicaragua, individual advocates have, for example, been revolutionaries
in the late 1970s, Sandinista supporters in the 1980s, feminist leaders in
the 1990s, and sexual rights proponents in the early part of the twenty-
first century. Activists who have opposed socially conservative values and
the coercive force of the antisodomy law find resonance in Gramsci’s
proposition that power is enacted through dominant culture, normative
hegemonies, and state coercion. Advocates who have focused their atten-
tion on sexual subjectivity find themselves engaged with what Foucault
understood as a proliferation of sexual discourses and diffuse operations
of power. Therefore, it is not that Gramsci and Marx are no longer useful
in a Foucauldian Nicaragua; indeed, many activists describe their current
work as a continuum in which the political expertise they gained during
the revolution is coupled with recent lessons learned on the geopolitical
world stage. However, if Marx and Gramsci influenced an earlier revolu-
tionary impulse, and Foucault partly conditioned Nicaragua’s postrevolu-
tionary era, human rights have become, as one activist pithily put it, de
moda (in style).17
Human rights arrived in Nicaragua through the usual channels: inter-
Introduction
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10
national organizations, development projects, and Nicaraguan advocates’
participation in transnational politics. Since the early 1990s, human rights
discourses have become de rigueur in funding proposals to organizations
in the global North, and they have become an integral part of activists’
knowledge regimes. At face value, human rights appear to be a relatively
straightforward proposition: a formula for equality based on what Hannah
Arendt (1958: 299) called “the assumed existence of a human being as
such.” However, following a longer tradition in Western political philoso-
phy from Aristotle on, human rights have also been a provocation, ques-
tioning what it means to be human and ultimately how humanity can
achieve a “common standard of decency” (Nagengast and Turner 1997:
269).18 Human rights and, in turn, sexual rights are not a transparent set
of practices; they are a social and historical process rather than an innate
set of values (Žižek 2005). For many activists in Nicaragua, human rights
offer a space to collectively safeguard people’s lives and dignity and to call
attention to how, as Judith Butler (2004: 32) has put it, “certain lives are
vulnerable and worthy of protection, [and] certain deaths are grievable
and worthy of public recognition.” As advocates lobby for policy change,
they are aiming to legitimate sexual rights as a political project. At the
same time, as activists designate sexual difference “worthy of protection,”
they are also participating in a deeper set of philosophical queries about
the qualities of freedom.
As in many places around the world where liberalism and rights-based
values are increasingly hegemonic, human rights approaches have mul-
tiplied in Nicaragua as the “concept of choice” (Boellstorff 2003a: 24).
However, human rights have not entirely replaced other political frame-
works. In their work to construct a hybrid politics of sexual rights, activ-
ists explicitly incorporate the political values of liberalism, rights, and
identity. But in the interest of tactical expediency, they also actively edit,
alter, or dismiss elements of these political approaches.19 The concept of
Sexuality Free from Prejudice, for instance, insists that when laws such
as Article 204 are in place, everyone’s sexuality—not just that of lesbians
and gays—is at risk. Imagining the possibility of a sexual worldview that
is “free from prejudice” also parallels Sandinismo’s communitarian im-
pulse to transform all of society, not just individuals’ subjectivity. Cam-
paigns such as “We Are Different, We Are Equal” draw on multiculturalist
notions of protecting and promoting difference and tolerance. Rhetorical
approaches that emphasize a biological rationale for sexuality, rather than
The Struggle
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11
simply questioning social norms, find their roots in developmental narra-
tives and a biopolitical body of knowledge. As with many contemporary
political projects, particularly in the developing world, Nicaraguan activ-
ists must mediate between ideological paradigms, financial contingen-
cies, and local political histories and priorities (Hale 2006; Speed 2007).
These efforts have resulted in a multidimensional and continually nego-
tiated set of principles that combine liberal strands of politics—such as
human rights, multiculturalism, and development—with the country’s
Marxian history.
Introduction
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12
tion of size. In a country in which mass-mobilization led to national up-
heaval and an overthrow of the state, the term “movement” has a particu-
larly massive quality. While many individual activists, coalitions, groups,
networks, and organizations had been promoting sexual rights in Nica-
ragua, by local standards of scope and scale, these interventions did not
quite reach the magnitude of a movement. The lesbian and gay movement
I thought I first saw on the streets of Managua was not, then, precisely a
“movement.” Neither was it exactly “lesbian” and “gay.”
Promoting tolerance for those marked as sexually “other,” including
lesbianas, gays, and homosexuales, has been a fundamental element of
sexual rights activists’ work. But theirs is not simply a lesbian and gay
rights movement. Nicaragua’s history of sexuality differs, rather substan-
tially, from many North American and European contexts in which many
lesbian and gay rights movements have their roots. The terms “lesbian,”
“gay,” and “homosexual” do not always capture the complexities of desire,
behavior, and naming practices that are found in Nicaragua. When they
use these terms, activists intend them to be very flexible categories, and
they are cognizant of both the opportunities and limitations of identity.
Moreover, many activists have chosen to think of their constituency in
national terms rather than limit their advocacy work to those who define
themselves, or are defined by others, as “gay” or “homosexual” or “lesbian.”
Therefore, rather than describing activists’ interventions as another les-
bian and gay rights movement, I believe that activists’ work is more appro-
priately described as a struggle for sexual rights. “Sexual rights” highlights
sexuality as a political object and joins it to rights as a political method,
without delineating a particular identity category.
Gay and lesbian movements, identity politics, lgbtq pride, and “out”
sexual politics have found much traction in places such as North America
and Europe.20 But sexual rights activists in Nicaragua, as elsewhere, must
consider how well these approaches coincide with the needs, desires, and
practices found in the global South. The new social movements of the
1960s and ’70s were an effort to establish new categories of rights and to
address the inequalities faced by women, indigenous people, and lesbians
and gays, among others.21 However, the very concept of a movement, as
Kay Warren (1998: 209) puts it, relies on a “Western grammar” that articu-
lates a relatively coherent and unified set of purposes. This particular logic
of movements, as Nicaraguan activists themselves aver, does not quite
The Struggle
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13
capture the tenor of their politics. Indeed, sexual rights advocacy projects
in Nicaragua do not precisely follow the contours of a new social move-
ment; their interventions are less “new,” less “social,” and less of a “move-
ment” than they may at first appear. Instead, they reflect older forms of
political praxis creatively recombined with human rights, identity politics,
and media interventions.
Because they were often seen to be oriented toward individual subjec-
tivity and self-fulfillment, new social movements supposedly were a radi-
cal departure from the “old left” politics of class-consciousness.22 How-
ever, the dividing line between “new” and “old” social movements and
political initiatives is not always so stark. Les W. Field (1998, 1999) has
demonstrated, for example, that socioeconomic and identity-based poli-
tics—particularly in regard to women and ethnic minorities—were never
entirely separate projects in Nicaragua (see also Hale 1996). As I will de-
scribe further in chapter 2, Nicaragua’s Marxian legacy, of the old social
movement ilk, continues to inform new struggles for sexual rights. Many
prominent sexual rights activists have managed to parlay their revolution-
ary militancia into present-day influence. Younger generations of activ-
ists are, like their Sandinista predecessors, acutely aware of how Nicara-
gua’s difficult socioeconomic conditions affect people’s ability to claim an
identity or participate in the struggle for sexual rights. A linear narrative
of “old” versus “new” approaches to advocacy, therefore, risks obscuring
more than it reveals: activists are multiply situated in time, as are their
political goals.
The goal of changing social policy and overturning the antisodomy
law has been critical for many sexual rights advocates. But equally, if not
more, important is the transformation of “culture.” Activists often speak
about Nicaraguan culture as a system of shared meanings—knowledge,
symbols, and practices that render an internal logic. While not neces-
sarily homogenous, from their point of view, culture reflects a historical
patrimony and a set of values that are recognizable as puro Nicaragüense
(purely, truly Nicaraguan). Culture is an entity that activists work for and
from, meaning that political and cultural aims often overlap and combine
and, in many cases, become “inextricable” (Fox and Starn 1997: 3; Keck
and Sikkink 1998). As activists envision culture as a precondition for poli-
tics, their advocacy interventions are often less social than they are cul-
tural—representing a more pluricentric political universe.
Introduction
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14
The Subject of Sexual Rights and Holding Hands across the Border
“Is it true,” Maria Elena asked me one day, “that girlfriends really can hold
hands on the street in the North? Or is that just a myth that we hear from
Nicas who have been to the United States? Is it really just something that
only happens in the movies?” In trying to respond to Maria Elena’s ques-
tion, I realized that my answer required some qualification. I wanted her
to know that, yes, in some places in the United States, this is indeed pos-
sible—but not everywhere. I explained that in San Francisco, a place well
known for queer culture, I had no concerns about holding hands with
my girlfriend, especially in neighborhoods like the Castro or in the Mis-
sion District. Beyond the possibility of public displays of affection, how-
ever, Maria Elena’s question reflected a larger supposition that I heard
many times in Nicaragua, if in different words and with different levels
of doubt or certainty. It went something like this: “In the North, you are
much more developed with your sexual rights” or “Gays and lesbians have
many more freedom in the United States. It is a much more tolerant and
open place.” I usually agreed that in the North, there are many legal pro-
tections, such as civil unions (and in some places, marriage equality),23
antidiscrimination laws, and penalties for hate crimes. However, I also
felt that it was important to point out that the United States is not a gay
utopia. For one, it is not without homophobia. Gay bashing and a belief
that “homosexual panic” can drive one to commit hate crimes persist and,
in the worst cases, have ended in murder. In contrast, historically, Nica-
ragua has not had a clear history of “organized, lethal violence nor pan-
icked attacks” against those who are, or are believed to be, homosexual
(Lancaster 1992: 247).24 Historically, Nicaragua’s gender and sexual sys-
tem, unlike the United States, has not fostered the social conditions that
would lead to gay bashing or hate crimes.25 Most of the lesbian and gay
Nicaraguans with whom I spoke, did not emphasize experiences of vio-
lence; instead, intimidation, humiliation, bullying, and blackmail have
been the weapons of choice against cochones and cochonas although this
too appears to be changing. The Nicaraguan government did institute and
uphold a particularly draconian antisodomy law, indicating that the coun-
try has hardly been hospitable to sexual difference. However, few people
were prosecuted under the law.26 Contradictions abound. In Nicaragua,
as in the North, what counts as “developed” sexual rights is a complicated
question involving legal prohibitions, cultural precedent, and distinct
The Struggle
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15
ways of viewing same-sex sexuality. The proposition that industrialized
countries have achieved perfect equity for sexual “minorities” is incor-
rect, and it fits all too neatly into dubious narratives of Western superi-
ority and Northern progress, modernity, and egalitarianism. These sorts
of questions about how to effectively institute sexual rights and how to
gauge their success, however, are both provocation and motivation for
Nicaraguan sexual rights activists. They are also questions that, in all of
their complexity, are foundational to much of the thinking in this book.27
Grappling with how to conceptualize, define, and animate “sexuality”
as a political device is foundational to the intellectual and political me-
diations of Nicaraguan activists. However, ascribing fixity to sexual terms
is a notoriously slippery proposition. Sexuality is a vast category that has
been used to give name and voice to desires and practices, to codify politi-
cal solidarity, and to define subjectivity and identity. As lesbian and gay
rights movements have emerged around the world, sexuality has come to
have a certain global political currency, or a “new primacy” (Weeks 1999:
35).28 However, the politics of sexuality is not without controversy in Nica-
ragua and elsewhere; it is a topic that stirs moral sentiments. Although
sexuality has been, and continues to be, a semiotic location to create soli-
darities, it is also a category that can be used to scrutinize subjects, often
under the auspices of health, psychiatry, and law (see, e.g., Foucault 1979;
Halperin 2002; Mosse 1985). The so-called culture wars, which at times
have appeared global in scope, often deploy sexuality as the heavy artil-
lery for generating moral panics and accusations of unchecked libertinage
or cultural imperialism (Duggan 2004; Gitlin 1995; Herat 2009; Massad
2002, 2008). The proliferation of sexual discourses can have disciplinary
repercussions, at times turning desire into diagnosis—or, as in Nicaragua,
criminality. As Nicaraguan activists attempt to establish a politics of sexual
rights, they take certain calculated risks. By lobbying for a set of rights as-
sociated with sexuality, they challenge some socially conservative values,
but they also open the door to backlash and accusations of moral impro-
priety. Managing these sorts of contingencies, both positive and negative,
is central to activists’ work on the conceptual borders of sexual rights.
The rise of sexual rights movements in many places around the world
sometimes makes it appear as though there is a singular, identifiable,
and universally understood “subject” of sexual rights. However, same-sex
desire, or practice, does not necessarily lead to a shared sense of commu-
nity or an unassailable appreciation of personal identity. The adoption of
Introduction
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16
particular terms (such as “gay,” “lesbian,” or “queer”) quickly uncovers
the difficulty of ascribing universal meaning to unique social, historical,
and political circumstances.29 As Evelyn Blackwood (2005: 44) has de-
scribed it, “One cannot talk about heterosexuality or homosexuality or any
sexuality without recognizing how it is interpreted, constructed, hedged
about, and defined differently across genders, ethnicities and classes.”
For some Nicaraguan activists, an important part of the lucha for sexual
rights involves fostering a shared sense of identity among women and men
who are, or would be, involved in same-sex relationships. This proposi-
tion is sometimes effective; at other times, it is less so. As many advo-
cates have found, there are polymorphous ways to define—or to choose
not to define—one’s sexuality. In discussion groups, for example, Nicara-
guan activist-facilitators encounter cochonas who are suspicious of “les-
bian” identity paradigms. Hosting lesbian discussion groups rather than
cochona discussion groups is, in the end, an ideological decision linked
to liberal value systems. It reflects a desire on the part of activists to place
same-sex sexuality under very particular signs of identity that are, not in-
consequentially, internationally legible.
The Struggle
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17
stands in some distinction to the egalitarian model that predominates in
many places in the global North.31 In the egalitarian model, one’s choice
of a same-sex object is the defining criterion of one’s homosexual status.
Both partners are viewed as equally homosexual and equally stigmatized,
no matter what their sexual role.32
The ways that status and stigma, honor and dishonor are apportioned
in these models are distinct (Lancaster 1987). However, models, in the
end, are simply templates that are prone to fissures.33 Martin Manalan-
san (1997) has shown us, for example, that particular values of modernity
and development become embedded in models of gay and lesbian identity
that assume a trajectory of progress from gender, role-based, “traditional”
sexual behaviors to egalitarian, “modern,” same-sex relationships. Sexual
citizenship in the global South may not follow the contours of putatively
“proper” gay and lesbian identities that have become hegemonic in much
of the global North, including identities that are idealized as egalitar-
ian and out. But neither does this mean that notions of the sexual self
that have their genesis in the global South are evolutionarily backward or
“underdeveloped” (Boellstorff 2005). Hector Carrillo (2002) documents,
for example, that Mexican men’s same-sex sexual activities can be com-
prehended and categorized following older models of gender roles and,
contemporaneously, linked to gay or homosexual identity. Rather than
(so-called) modern identities’ replacing (so-called) traditional formula-
tions of same-sex sexual activities, these are synthetic, locally contextual-
ized ways to conceive of sexual identity and practice. Although particular
“sexual scripts” (Gagnon 2004) may condition and contextualize behavior
and desire,34 the ways in which sexuality is practiced and experienced is
not easily codified by a singular definition. What constitutes “homosexu-
ality” for an individual or within a particular community, in a given place
and time, is perhaps infinitely mutable. Sexuality has many histories, none
of them in the absolute singular, universal, or constant.
While it is likely that there have always been women in Nicaragua
who have had affective and sexual relationships with other women, like
much of the West historically (Hall 1990 [1928]; Lorde 1984; Rich 1980),
women’s same-sex sexuality has not had much public visibility in Nicara-
gua. Roger Lancaster, an anthropologist working in Nicaragua in the late
1980s and early 1990s, claimed for example, that there is “little popular
interest in categorizing or regulating female same-sex relations and little
exists in the popular lexicon [of Nicaragua] to account for it” (Lancaster
Introduction
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18
1992: 271). Although women’s same-sex sexuality may not have the same
degree of recognition in the popular imagination as the cochón,35 I have
never encountered a Nicaraguan who was unfamiliar with the term and
the personage embodied by the “cochona.”36 Cochonas, Nicaraguans will
explain (invoking stereotypes to do so), are easily identified by their hom-
bruna (mannish) behavior and the long-sleeve men’s shirts they are said to
favor.37 Cochonas’ partners and girlfriends were often described to me as
femenina or muy mujer (very womanish): women who followed the rules
of feminine comportment. Subscribing to Nicaraguan gender norms and,
supposedly, taking a pasiva sexual role, femeninas could be in relation-
ships with other women yet never be seen as lesbians.38 Femeninas—like
their macho analogue, the cochonero—typically have not attracted either
stigma or mockery. In my experiences, they also never garnered the same
kind of attention or notice on the street that gender-transgressive cocho-
nas did.39 When activists work to establish lesbian identity among both co-
chonas and femeninas, therefore, it is not simply that a new, positive term
(“lesbiana”) is being affixed to an older and more familiar personage (the
cochona). Rather, a more expansive sexual category is being created that
is populated not only with “dykes” but also with their muy mujer partners
and lovers. In other words, femenina women who would not have been
considered gay in the past, now are.
Like so many other lesbian rights movements and communities in the
global South, Nicaraguan women’s same-sex sexuality and struggles for
sexual rights have been absent in much of the social science scholarship.40
As Norma Mogrovejo (1999: 207), a Peruvian feminist sociologist, has put
it, uncovering “the history of the lesbian movement in Latin America is
not only a historical, anthropological, sociological or political task, it is
also an archaeological task.”41 Although the omission of women’s same-
sex sexuality is beginning to be remedied in some academic circles, there
is more to be done (Boellstorff 2007; Weston 1993).42 While the erasure
of women’s same-sex sexuality is one compelling reason I focus attention
on derechos lesbianos, there are two, more locally salient reasons to do
so. First, women’s same-sex sexuality and lesbian rights have had a very
controversial presence in Nicaraguan gender politics and women’s rights
organizing, from Sandinismo to the present.43 The question of where les-
bians “fit” into the country’s political schema is an ongoing one. Second,
the antisodomy penalties Nicaragua instituted in 1992 were unusual in
their gendered scope. The law effectively criminalized women’s same-sex
The Struggle
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19
encounters, not only those of men—as is often the case with antisodomy
laws. In a punitive way, the law signaled some form of “egalitarian” crimi-
nal liability that put women’s same-sex sexuality at risk in ways that it had
not been before. Activism on behalf of lesbian rights, then, constitutes
a rather dramatic intervention. It demands acknowledging the ways in
which women’s same-sex sexuality has been less visible in public culture
and, at the same time, politically volatile within women’s rights advocacy.
Orienting sexual rights toward lesbianas establishes a more immediately
visible category of identity. As rights claims are made on behalf of la les-
biana rather than la cochona—or for los homosexuales or los gays rather
than los cochones—sexual rights become a location not only to establish
ideals of equality but also to reimagine the categories themselves (Valen-
tine 2004). How sexual rights advocates in Nicaragua have undertaken
these mediations of knowledge and political practice—from intimate
pedagogies and epistemological engineering to the mass-mediation of
sexual subjectivity—is the subject of the chapters that follow.
Introduction
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20
of sexual rights advocacy. As they articulate concepts such as lesbian “con-
sciousness,” orientación sexual, and opción sexual, the discussion groups’
leaders hope to draw from global registers of rights and identity. But they
are also attentive to the realities of participants’ lives. In these talleres
(workshops), activists and participants strive to develop “lesbian” as a des-
ignation that can, and does, stand for many things. Activists who act as
discussion group leaders are usually less focused on crafting a particu-
lar model of lesbian identity than they are committed to cultivating par-
ticipants’ desire to understand, to question, and, above all, to name their
sexuality as such. Activists’ intimate pedagogical work and their efforts
to train participants in a repertoire of sexual identities, I argue, involves
a particular education of desire: to become bien educada (well mannered,
well educated) in the subject of sexuality.
As activists endeavor to change the way Nicaraguans understand sexu-
ality, they must negotiate thorny questions about how to best present the
public face of sexual rights. In chapter 3, “Pride and Prejudice,” I analyze
several events, including press conferences, expert presentations, meet-
ings, and celebrations. Negotiating how the lucha will be represented is an
important dimension of activists’ mediations, particularly in events such
as these, which are explicitly intended to influence the larger Nicaraguan
population. It is this very publicness that compels advocates to assidu-
ously craft particular ways of representing sexuality and subjectivity, for
as the lucha “comes out,” the stakes rise. In their ongoing debates about
lesbian and gay pride and sexuality free from prejudice, and in their atten-
tion to the politics of declaración and drag, I have found that activists are
engaged in epistemological negotiations, attempting to intellectually engi-
neer the public face of sexual rights.
In chapter 4, “Mediating Sexual Subjectivities,” I discuss how sexual
rights activists have used television, radio, and print to construct and con-
vey the values of sexual rights through public culture. The representation
of lesbian and gay characters in mass-media forums is an important venue
for activists to perform particular ideals of sexuality and, in turn, toler-
ance. The social justice telenovela (soap opera) Sexto Sentido was produced
by a Nicaraguan feminist ngo and scripted, shot, and screened with an
explicitly political purpose: to “normalize” lesbians and gay men. Activ-
ists who have produced radio programming that addresses sexuality and
stigma, such as the radio show Sin Máscaras (Without Masks), like the
activist producers of the telenovela, have aimed for broad public appeal
The Struggle
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21
and interactions with their audience. They have invited listeners to pro-
duce queries and engagements with the subject of sexuality. Nicaragua’s
first and only lesbian magazine, Humanas ([Female] Humans), was de-
veloped by a group of activists in an effort to critique the country’s anti-
sodomy law and create greater visibility for lesbians and lesbian rights.
Although the print run was small, the magazine was dense with semiotic
and political significance. In each of these mass-mediated approaches to
advocacy, sexual rights activists have been aware of the need to protect
both their audience and their authors from potential persecution or prose-
cution. Their media productions therefore illustrate how sexual rights be-
come visible and embodied through the disembodying practices of ano-
nymity on the airwaves and in print. In each of these media interventions,
I argue, activists have sought to create a dialogic relationship and a re-
ciprocal exchange of information between themselves and their audience.
In doing so, sexual rights advocates have attempted to incorporate the
democratic and non-hierarchical principles that are central to their politi-
cal mission.
“Getting the Word Out,” the concluding chapter, provides an update
to the work of Nicaraguan sexual rights advocates, assessing their ac-
complishments and unfulfilled goals, as well as the ways in which their
struggle continues. Reflecting on an asylum trial for a Nicaraguan gay
man for which I served as an expert witness, I pose the difficult question
of how to qualify success in the domain of sexual rights. I also return to
a central proposition that has motivated this book: how ethnographies of
activism can help us to better understand the politics of the twenty-first
century. Activist “cultures,” are not, I suggest, dissimilar to the “cultures”
of ethnographic research that anthropologists have developed. Each of
them depends on close and collaborative conversations, grappling with
the social issues of the time, and a commitment to engaging a broader
public. The study of activism is, however, complicated by the fact that
analysis and critique must be weighed against the desire among many an-
thropologists, myself included, to advocate for the social justice agendas
of the people with whom we work. Despite the difficult union between
analysis and advocacy, I believe that it is valuable to be in close conversa-
tion with activists. Their work signals many of the social dynamics of the
contemporary moment, including the frictions and conjunctions that are
inherent when global paradigms become reimagined in local contexts.
Introduction
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22