Challenging Pentecostal Moralism: Erotic Geographies, Religion and Sexual Practices Among Township Youth in Cape Town
Challenging Pentecostal Moralism: Erotic Geographies, Religion and Sexual Practices Among Township Youth in Cape Town
Challenging Pentecostal Moralism: Erotic Geographies, Religion and Sexual Practices Among Township Youth in Cape Town
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To cite this Article Burchardt, Marian(2011) 'Challenging Pentecostal moralism: erotic geographies, religion and sexual
practices among township youth in Cape Town', Culture, Health & Sexuality,, First published on: 31 March 2011 (iFirst)
To link to this Article: DOI: 10.1080/13691058.2011.566356
URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13691058.2011.566356
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Culture, Health & Sexuality
2011, 1–15, iFirst
paper explores negotiations over sexuality, intimate relationships and love among
Xhosa-speaking township youth. It introduces the notion of erotic geographies to
consider how possible influences of religious discourses on sexuality are refracted by
alternative cultural orientations and material contexts. Findings suggest that premarital
abstinence appears as a highly exceptional ideal for youth. Even among Pentecostal
youth, notions of sexuality are largely severed from religiosity and faithfulness and
romanticism are dominant ideals. Future research on Pentecostalism and sexuality
should be less religious-centric and rooted more firmly in ethnographies of youth
sexual cultures.
Keywords: South Africa; youth sexuality; ethnography; Pentecostalism
Introduction
In South Africa, the engagement of churches and other faith-based organisations (FBOs)
with the HIV prevention has been decisive in catapulting concern with the links between
religion, youth sexuality, intimate relationships and love onto the agenda of the social
sciences. Particularly in urban centres, during the last ten years churches and FBOs began
offering life-skills courses to church youth focused on issues of love, relationships and
sexual health. Most of these activities focus increasingly on promoting premarital
abstinence and marital fidelity.
As elsewhere in Africa, the urge to promote premarital abstinence, marital fidelity and
‘virtuous’ life conduct is particularly pronounced in Pentecostal Christianity, which is
growing at a rapid pace in urban townships.1 While, historically, conversion to
Christianity did not have major influences on sexual culture, Pentecostals’ public
discourse on sexual morality affords questions about such influences renewed significance.
Pentecostal churches’ calls for sexual abstinence, however, sit uneasily with the social
and cultural realities that structure the lives of most urban youth. Intimate relationships are
a central part of young people immersed in urban consumer culture, and sexual intercourse
is perceived as a taken-for-granted part of such relationships. Moreover, what might be the
perceptions of premarital abstinence messages in a social context where marriage is often
*Email: marian.burchardt@uni-leipzig.de
‘conduct of life’ are construed as the essential means of moving across these boundaries
and achieving salvation as the supreme state of human existence (Meyer 1998). In this
context, Robbins (2004) notes that Pentecostalism’s:
. . . dualism also brings itself to bear on action through its moral codes, which ban contact
with the satanic world by forbidding drinking and drug use, extramarital sexuality, fighting
and aggressive displays, gambling, ostentatious dress, and participation in secular
entertainments such as cinema and dancing. (128)
Much of the more recent research into the dynamics of religion and sexuality is in line with
these observations and links them to the incipient incorporation of concerns with
HIV/AIDS into the agendas of Pentecostal moralism. If not always explicitly, the
evangelical notion of ‘being saved’ is increasingly taken to include AIDS in the list of
evils from which twice-born Christians are delivered (Gusman 2009). Membership in a
Pentecostal community through conversion is assumed to save individuals from the threat
of HIV, sometimes replacing the biomedical notion of sexual transmission with the idea of
‘immunity by faith’ (Burchardt 2007). There is ample evidence that until 2000 Pentecostal
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responses to AIDS linked the disease to ideas of sin and divine retribution (Parsitau 2009)
– more recently, attitudes have become more open.
Furthermore, in embracing AIDS as a social problem, religious groups construct their
own sexual discourse, contributing to bringing sexuality into the public sphere as a subject
of debate (Leclerc-Madlala 2005; Iliffe 2007). Here, the most controversial issue is
invariably condom promotion, which many churches equate with the promulgation of
sexual promiscuity (Parsitau 2009, 51). As a result, the focus is almost always, especially
in the Pentecostal field, on preaching morals, abstinence and fidelity. Regarding direct
influences of church teachings on HIV prevention and sexual practices, Garner (2000)
claims that membership in Pentecostal churches safeguards against pre- and extramarital
sex and HIV-infection, while Agadjanian (2005) is rather sceptical.
Research on Pentecostalism and sexuality is characterised by three main shortcomings.
Firstly, most studies focus on church discourses, while conclusions about real practices
and their ethnographic support are sometimes unclear. In her book on Pentecostal churches
in Durban, Helgesson (2006) quotes a church handbook that strictly prohibits premarital
sex: ‘if the leadership discovers that a member is engaged in premarital sex, disciplinary
action would have to follow’ (188). Yet, unfortunately, she does not explore what the
leadership does not discover. Secondly, to the extent conclusions about abstinence and
fidelity are drawn from research into church discourse, studies seem to be based on strong
assumptions: about the centrality of religiosity in people’s lives, about the individual
importance of sexuality for religiosity and about the effectiveness of the church
communities’ social control. Yet the validity of these assumptions is not always proven.
Thirdly, studies sometimes fail to acknowledge that sexual relationships and practices are
not only shaped in religious cultures, especially in urban contexts there is an autonomous
domain of sexual culture per se. As a result, there is a tendency to reify ‘religious
communities’ as totalities whose believers have no social existence outside of them. In his
otherwise perceptive analysis of Pentecostal articulations with intergenerational struggles
in urban Uganda, Gusman, (2009) for instance, notes that ‘control over sexuality is taken
away from adults . . . and it is granted to the religious community, which has the
responsibility of controlling the behaviour of young believers’ (77). While the argument is
compelling for considering discursive shifts, it may be based on an unrealistic theory of
youth sexuality. Significantly, scholars acknowledge that their informants admit they ‘are
of course not free from temptations’ (Gusman 2009, 77) and ‘ . . . “backslide” or “fall”
4 M. Burchardt
once in a while’ from the ideal of abstinence (Parsitau 2009, 59). Social scientists, then,
must scrutinise whether ‘falling’ is less an accidental or random failure of the flesh than a
systematic effect of orientations towards an entirely different cultural imaginary, for
example romanticism. In other words, it might be that ‘falling’ is a way of packaging and
translating into a religious idiom, encouraged by the religious context in which these
statements are generated, what may in fact be practices associated with, for instance,
romancing, experimentation or transactional sex (Sadgrove 2007).
The hypothetical connections between religious commitment, religious participation
and sexual style emerging from this research are summarized in Figure 1.
Importantly, these assumptions appear abstracted from the social realities of intimate
life characteristic of the wider youth communities in which believers’ ideals and practices
are embedded. In the following I will therefore begin by focusing in on the structures of
youth socio-eroticism as I witnessed them in the township of Khayelitsha. Only as a
second step do I consider how these structures and the sexual styles they reflect articulate
with Pentecostal belonging.4
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access to shopping malls located far from home in more affluent suburbs, streets are an
essential space in the youth social life. Streets provide the cultural scenery where people
get to know each other, make acquaintances, casually initiate sexual liaisons, forge new
relationships and ritually perform existing ones. At almost any time of day, but particularly
in the afternoon, one can observe groups of young women and men sojourning outside in
search of such interactions. Once a promising contact between two individuals has been
forged, groups of young people will, on subsequent occasions, routinely pass where others
are known to linger and provide the ostensibly casual context for an intensified
engagement between potential lovers. The eroticisation of female-male encounters in
public spaces is further reinforced by the fact that after sexual debut, young people rarely
consider members of the other sex as possible friends. Under these circumstances, almost
any close and recurring contact between young women and men outside of formal settings
is potentially invested with erotic meaning.
While kissing in public is relatively rare, other kinds of bodily contact between young
women and men in public are culturally endorsed and key to understanding the gendered
nature of sexual relationships. As is the case in most Western societies, couples hold
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hands, walk arm-in-arm and occasionally hug in public. In this regard, the street is
rendered a site in which bodily contact serves to perform an intimate relationship and to
showcase a relationship to the peer community. For both women and men, this entails
statements to sexual maturity and articulates claims to the particular partner with whom
one has managed to form an intimate tie. Moreover, the public performance of
relationships is necessary for transforming the value of one’s partner – measured in terms
of beauty and personal coolness – into individual prestige qua erotic capital. Being seen
with a beautiful girl performing such codified bodily rituals increases a man’s erotic
capital, coolness and attractiveness in the eyes of other women and affords him the respect
of his male peers. Among men, achieving a relationship is overwhelmingly defined
through concepts of conquest and public visibility is an essential condition for the social
recognition thereof. For young women, being seen with a ‘cool guy’ is key to evaluations
of erotic esteem by themselves and others but also to keep other aspirants at bay. While
research on sexuality in South Africa has often emphasised that men evaluate conquest in
terms of the number of sexual partners, it has largely overlooked the importance of
economies of attraction and beauty in effecting sexual prestige.5 Within these economies
of attraction, those less endowed with erotic capital may also be self-selected into
alternative cultural spheres such as Pentecostalism where they may capitalise on strong
commitment in a different hierarchy of social value.
Bodily contact is essential within existing intimate relationships but it is also a
modality by which young women and men engage with one another in the first place. In the
course of ‘hanging out’, ensuing social interaction but also routine conversations between
young women and men are often accompanied by bodily touching. The prerogative as well
as the expectation to initiate these physical intimacies lies with men. These bodily aspects
of female-male interaction exhibit a playful character and the younger and the more
intimately acquainted the participants the more bodily play will be at the centre of
collective attention, easily surpassing the themes of the conversation in significance.
However, despite its playful nature such interaction is sometimes infused with subtle
physical violence: women’s resistance against touches are sometimes met with forceful
reactions by men. These are virtually embryonic forms of male assertions to control
women’s mobility that are – according to literally all of the existing studies – typical of
heterosexual relationships in South Africa (Varga 1997; Preston-Whyte 1999; Wood and
Jewkes 2005). It appears that playful rituals of bodily touch in routine street interaction serve
6 M. Burchardt
One of the ways which enabled young people to address sexuality while
simultaneously ‘masking’ their sexual involvements and employing culturally adequate
registers was to rely on linguistic modalities that were both detached and centred on ideals
(‘one should be careful about relationships’, ‘relationships should be respectful’ etc.). In
the pastors’ discourse, however, rather Manichean Pentecostal ideas of sin and darkness
were also reinforced through direct associations between alcohol, sexual permissiveness
and disease.
Finally, young people’s sociality was transformed and de-eroticised when
conversations between pastors and youth emerged through casual encounters in the
township streets themselves. Whenever I walked with a pastors to someone else’s house
and we had conversations with youth groups in the street, young people would
immediately abandon physical touches, take on more upright bodily positions and
temporarily arrest the playful nature of interaction and the performances of intimacy that
are otherwise pervasive. These practices, just as the adherence to certain registers of
comportment and discourse in church services and church-based workshops, are mainly
driven by the desire to show respect to the pastors and to acknowledge the quasi-religious
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nature their presence imparts to these social situations. In other words: regardless of their
actual sexual styles or practices, young people had an immediate understanding of the
adequate performance with regard to intimacy or the suppression thereof.
For some members of these youth communities, however, such respectful
comportment reflected a deeply seated habitus and publicly displayed the fact that they
were, according to all available information, abstainers. These were often daughters or
sons of pastors or other adults who belonged to the ‘inner circle’ of churches. Others
sometimes mocked this habitus as ‘too much holiness’, a notion that reflected a perceived
lack of erotic capital and essentially positioned them as outside of the game. The fact that
these young people were permanent church members raises questions about the links
between people’s biographical religious trajectories and sexual style.
or both. In some cases, young people would abandon church attendance in their teenage
years because they felt oppressed in their church and had been attracted to other forms of
youth culture; some reassumed membership after some years. Sometimes people returned
to the church once they were engaged in a stable relationship and headed towards
marriage. At this point in the life course, church sexual doctrines were no longer an issue.
Therefore, we must consider how links between religiosity and sexual style evolve in a
context of accelerated social mobility and shifting cultural orientations.
While social continuity and the seamless embedding of young people’s social lives
into religious contexts can favour sexual abstinence, the marked discontinuity of
religiosity and family relations often explains the re-orientation to alternative cultural
models in which sex is not banned but encouraged. People either engage in intercourse
before they convert to Pentecostal Christianity or else membership in the church remains
temporarily limited and finishes before marriage would be due. Thus, people either
abandon the practice of abstinence because they leave the church and the strong Christian
model, or vice versa. Others, as the discussion below will show, become ‘born again’
while the meanings of conversion are largely detached from, and therefore do not affect,
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on of hands ritual healing for her affliction, she decided to leave the church and joined
El Shaddai.
At El Shaddai, Poppy formed a close friendship with Meliziswe, the church’s pastor,
and his family. She regularly attended Sunday services and became a member of the
church’s youth group and choir. Pentecostal faith was definitely central to her life but
nevertheless severed from her ideas about intimate relationships. She strongly expounded
an idea of romantic love as the basis of long-term relationships and viewed marriage as
dispensable. When asked about the meaning of religion for her intimate life, she merely
answered smilingly: ‘We are young people, what do you think?’
At some stage during my field research, Poppy had a short-lived sexual liaison with
Mandla, Melziswe’s 20-year-old nephew who had just moved to Cape Town from his
Eastern Cape native village. When the story was revealed, the liaison resulted in severe
tensions between Meliziswe, Poppy and Mandla. For a prolonged period Poppy stopped
visiting the family and Mandla moved out of his shared quarters with the rest of his family.
The main reason for the conflict, however, was not that the young people had premarital
sexual intercourse but the fact that they had unprotected sex. They did so even though
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Mandla knew about Poppy’s infection. In this context it is interesting to note that El
Shaddai does cultivate an official discourse that emphasises premarital abstinence and
marital fidelity, prohibits the discussion of condoms in church and encourages young
members to set up a marriage plan if their relationship is, or is made, public. Nevertheless,
there are no sanctions against offenders as is the case in Pentecostal communities in
KwaZulu Natal studied by Garner (2000). Moreover, outside the church setting, Pastor
Meliziswe encourages condom use among the young people around him and is highly
engaged in local activism on AIDS. It appears that the church is able to accommodate a
variety of sexual styles without major internal confrontations.
Similar to Poppy, Mandla is a very active member of the congregation and a lead singer
in the choir. Moreover, he has given sermons during the Sunday services despite his young
age and offers prayers in the domestic family context. Nevertheless, his notion of intimate
relationships and sex were a far cry from those officially endorsed by the church. On one
occasion, he showed me photographs of about 10 young girls, claiming that they were all his
girlfriends and that for an ‘African man’ it was utterly central to have as many girlfriends as
possible.8 He also emphasised the importance of the traditional Xhosa male initiation rites for
accomplishing legitimate manhood and rejected the idea of a ‘white wedding’ as
inappropriate ‘for Africans’, favouring a traditional Xhosa wedding instead.9 The possible
articulations between Pentecostal Christianity and sexual style were thus distinctly refracted
through an emphatic neo-traditionalism, a pattern that seems typical for recent rural-urban
migrants. However, in the urban peer group context these Africanist elements of his
discourse were largely obliterated and transfigured into a secularised masculine hedonism.
As I will show below, however, this ‘Africanist position’ was highly contested.
As a pastor, Meliziswe was aware of the existence of this ‘Africanist’ element amongst
both the congregation and the neighbourhood population at large. Especially as a
politically concerned citizen, the idea of excluding co-religionists due to their Africanist
notions of sexuality would have appeared strange to him. Even though he personally
rejected polygamy, he tended to view alternative ideas as acceptable cultural pluralism, as
a matter of private choice and as secondary to belief in Jesus Christ.
Meliziswe’s openness to accepting people of ‘different walks of life’ was also a result
of his conviction that being Christian was a process that involved constant struggles
against evil forces. People may fail at some point but become more successful through
assistance. In this spirit, in 2008 he decided to accept Matthew as a new church member.
10 M. Burchardt
Matthew had been a member of a township gang for many of his teenage years. He had
been involved in petty crime of all sorts and spent several months in prison. Again, he
probably would have ended up in the streets after being released from prison if Meliziswe
had not decided to put him up in his own house. He remarked in an interview:
My life was a mess, Marian, but the Lord saved me. I was always after girls, and after drinks
and drugs. Even now, I don’t have a job and I don’t know what will happen. But one day I will
marry.
Matthew’s account of his life was entirely structured by the experience of conversion. For
him, the fact of having become a ‘secondary abstainer’ was part of a broader narrative that
the linked the passage from gang culture into Pentecostalism to a radical change of sexual
style.10 As the following section shows, however, this model was rather exceptional.
were convinced of their male partner’s commitment. There is definitely an elective affinity
between women’s heightened concerns about engaging in sexual relationships and the
gendered nature of religious participation, that is, their concerns with sex are reinforced by
their greater involvement in church life.
Men who were in the dating stage, on the other hand, were most concerned with
ensuring that their potential partner was not too closely ‘in touch’ with too many men, they
would view this as telling of her future faithfulness (or not). The more a woman appeared
to remain at a certain distance from men, the more a potential relationship seemed safe,
both in terms of preserving sexual exclusivity and with regard to HIV and AIDS.
One particularly emotionally charged issue was infidelity. Women and men levelled
constant mutual accusations of cheating. Especially among men, however, these
accusations were formulated in general terms. The fact that none of my informants
accused his current girlfriend of infidelity corroborates the argument that securing female
fidelity, both in practice and public perception, is key to successful masculine ‘face-work’
(Goffman 1963, 5) and to accumulating gendered symbolic capital. Equally important,
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however, was the fact that their girlfriend’s cheating would hurt their feelings and the men
were acutely aware of the dangers love and emotional attachments becoming too strong.
Likewise, emotions were seen as critical in motivating men to have casual sex. As a result,
the meaning of emotions remained highly indeterminate: romantic feelings are important
for authenticating the personal bond but they may also be detrimental in possibly eroding
rational concerns.
If both young men and women admitted to engage in casual sex they did so on different
terms. Whereas the women definitely agreed that ‘there is something wrong’ with their
love relationship if they ‘cheat’, men saw ‘cheating’ as something that happens now and
then but not as necessarily breaching their emotional bonds. The men’s discussion
revealed that the adherence to faithfulness is to some degree a strategic adaptation to
women’s demands. If they did not produce the impression of sexual exclusivity they knew
they might face difficulties in sustaining or initiating relationships with desired women.
The female participants, in turn, lamented such adaptation by complaining about men
building up facades of romance, which they knew ‘are nothing but lies’. Importantly, they
maintained the intrinsic connections between sexual exclusivity and love by stating that if
they ‘cheated’ it was because of disturbed emotions and that they would only do so if their
relationship was ‘nearly dead’.
Despite young people’s overwhelming endorsement of notions of romantic love,
faithfulness and serial monogamy, they acknowledged that they also engage in casual
sexual encounters. Although framed as ‘stupid things’, casual sex and the situations in
which it happens turned out to have logics of their own. In men’s accounts, these situations
were associated with parties, music, dance, alcohol consumption, the collective smoking
of marihuana – these nightlife terrains are a sphere of reality that is ontologically different
from the ‘normal reality’ of everyday life. In popular imagination and practice, nightlife
comprises and produces heightened levels of sensuality – the above-mentioned props are
core material resources in this regard. Furthermore, nightlife is a cartography of
designated locales (street parties, shebeens) and has its own rhythm. All of these aspects –
place, time, sensualised atmosphere and interaction – propel nightlife into a different
province of meaning in the Schützian sense. Nightlife also has its own logic with regard to
sexual encounters ensuing from these interactions. Under darkness, people engage in
sexual encounters they would not condone under different circumstances because of
relationship ideals.
12 M. Burchardt
What we find here is a carnal logic of sex characterised by a rejection of concern over
fidelity and HIV, an ideal of immediacy and expressiveness and a mode of experience and
practice that is construed as ‘flows of events’ rather than as choice. Because of the
heteronomy intrinsic to religious teachings about sex, religious groups are mostly unable
to offer similar experiences of sensual immediacy – young people who have ‘smelled’
township nightlife culture often long for these releases. In this way, deviations from
relationship ideals, even if at some level construed as random, are of a systematic nature.11
They also reveal that, especially for men, the real dilemma is the choice between
faithfulness and multiple concurrent partnerships while concerns with their Pentecostal
faith are rather about showing respect in specifically religious settings.
Conclusion
In urban South Africa, as elsewhere, details about sexual life are generally considered a
private matter. People carefully decide what and to whom they disclose and routinely
transfer this attitude of concealment to into all sorts of research conversations. The
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resulting difficulties for research are further exacerbated in religious contexts where there
is much ‘face’ to be lost. Researchers may be easily and subconsciously inclined to take
the overwhelming force of, especially evangelical, discourse as evidence of what people
practice. In order to arrive at a more differentiated and realistic conceptualisation of the
interface of religion and sexuality, I have called for rooting these inquiries more firmly in
ethnographies of youth sexual culture.
In this regard, this paper illuminates the numerous social forces that mediate possible
influences of religion on sexual practices. In addition, I challenge popular and academic
assumptions about linear connections between religious membership and sexual style and
consider how methodological decisions might condition findings. Entrance to the field
through religious groups inevitably highlights forms of moral self-presentation and
imposes upon the ethnographic account the same limitations that religious groups impose
upon their discourse. Entering the field through ethnographic work with young people
outside religious contexts, by contrast, lowers moral barriers against sexual disclosure and
reveals that such direct influences are far from standard, even among strongly committed
young Pentecostals. In the highly dynamic context of urban South Africa, Christian
notions of premarital abstinence compete with orientations towards romantic love and
neo-traditionalist understandings of sex. Against this backdrop, premarital abstinence
stands out as a possible but highly exceptional sexual style. One of the major reasons is
that, at least in metropolitan Cape Town, Pentecostalism does not constitute a tightly
segregated cultural world. Pentecostal youth comprises both nominal and strongly
committed adherents and both tend to traverse and be embraced by the same erotic
geographies as others, unless family religiosity provides for major social continuity. This
may lead to a situation in which religion and sexual culture exist as two relatively separate
domains despite Pentecostal church leaders’ endeavours to define sexuality virtuousness
as central to being ‘born again’.
Within these erotic geographies, however, sexuality and intercourse rarely appear as
reified objects to be chosen or rejected. Rather, they are embedded in sophisticated
strategies of dating and intimate aspirations where romancing and faithfulness are more
central to practice than are issues of marriage or sin. In this context, faith-based sexual
education and HIV-prevention programmes focusing on premarital abstinence may be
‘preaching to the converted’. They confirm what (some of the) firm believers knew all
along but, despite admirable efforts to speak the language of youth, fall short of engaging
Culture, Health & Sexuality 13
with the material and cultural structures in which conceptions and practices of dating and
sexuality are shaped.
Acknowledgements
The research on which this paper is based was generously supported by Evangelisches Studienwerk
Villigst and the Irmgard Coninx Foundation at the Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB).
For critical discussions and thoughtful comments of earlier versions of the paper and the
ethnographic material I wish to thank Monika Wohlrab-Sahr, Jim Beckford, Crystal Biruk as well as
four anonymous reviewers. For insightful discussions on sexuality and religion I wish to thank the
members of the International Research Network Religion and AIDS in Africa, particularly
Alessandro Gusman, Rijk van Dijk, Eileen Moyer and Hansjoerg Dilger. Finally, I am indebted to
Monwabisi Maqgoki who facilitated most of the field research.
Notes
1. According to census data of 2001, 78.522 of Black Capetonians identified as members of
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Pentecostal or Charismatic churches (Statistics South Africa 2004). However, this might be an
underestimation as we may assume that a fair share of those who identify themselves as
belonging to ‘other Christian churches’ (79.143) might in fact also be Pentecostals.
2. For an important exception see Sadgrove (2007).
3. Group discussions and interviews were carried out in English while casual peer conversations
were translated to me by a Xhosa-speaking research assistant.
4. I use the notion of ‘sexual styles’ as a subcategory of ‘cultural styles’ (Ferguson 1999) and as
one of its manifestations.
5. On the importance of numbers of sexual partners for negotiations of masculine peer hierarchies
see Preston-Whyte (1999); on the ways personal wealth is invested into entertaining multiple
sexual relationships producing the sugar-daddy phenomenon see Hunter (2002); on male and
female taxonomies see Wood and Jewkes (2005).
6. The group discussions included 6 – 8 individuals, took place in family homes in the absence of
parents and were based on ‘natural groups’, i.e., groups of friends with a vast stock of common
experiences.
7. All names in the article have been changed.
8. For Mandla, a girlfriend appeared to be any woman with whom he had some kind of sexual
liaison.
9. Africanist orientations, forming a cultural style which Mayer (1980) called ‘Red’, were also
revealed in his numerous invocations of unprotected sex as ‘flesh-to-flesh’.
10. He also declined to participate in the group discussions.
11. For a detailed discussion of gender differences in interpreting notions of romance in Christian
discourse in South Africa see Burchardt (2010).
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Résumé
Les recherches sur les constructions de la sexualité dans le pentecôtalisme se heurtent souvent au fait que
le contexte dans lequel elle sont conduites sont définis ex ante par les communautés d’église, et que cela
impose aux récits ethnographiques les mêmes limites que celles imposées aux discours des pentecôtistes
par la moralité de leur église. En prenant pour point d’entrée méthodologique dans ce domaine de jeunes
pentecôtistes évoluant dans un espace non explicitement religieux, cet article explore les négociations
autour de la sexualité, les relations intimes et l’amour, parmi des jeunes des townships qui s’expriment en
xhosa. Il préconise le recours à la notion de géographies érotiques pour évaluer jusqu’où les possibles
influences des discours religieux sur la sexualité sont reflétées par les orientations culturelles alternatives
et les contextes matériels. Les résultats suggèrent que l’abstinence pré maritale représente un idéal très
exceptionnel pour les jeunes. Même parmi les jeunes pentecôtistes, les notions de sexualité sont
largement séparées de la religiosité, et la fidélité comme le romantisme sont des idéaux dominants. Les
futures recherches sur le pentecôtalisme et la sexualité doivent être moins centrées sur les aspects
religieux et plus fermement enracinées dans les ethnographies des cultures sexuelles des jeunes.
Culture, Health & Sexuality 15
Resumen
Los estudios sobre las construcciones de la sexualidad en el pentecostalismo se suelen ver
obstaculizados por el hecho de que el entorno de la investigación está definido ex ante en lo que
respecta a las comunidades eclesiásticas, lo que significa que los relatos etnográficos están sujetos a
las mismas limitaciones que también impone la moralidad pentecostal al discurso de los miembros
de la iglesia. Trabajando con jóvenes de la iglesia pentecostal en un espacio no explı́citamente
religioso para entrar en este campo de forma metodológica, en este artı́culo analizamos de qué modo
negocian los jóvenes de un municipio de habla Xhosa la sexualidad, las relaciones ı́ntimas y el amor.
Introducimos la noción de las geografı́as eróticas para considerar cómo las posibles influencias de los
discursos religiosos en la sexualidad están refractadas por orientaciones culturales alternativas y
contextos materiales. Los resultados indican que la abstinencia prematrimonial aparece como un
ideal sumamente excepcional para los jóvenes; e incluso entre los jóvenes de la iglesia Pentecostal
las nociones de sexualidad están en gran medida disociadas de la religiosidad, y la fidelidad y el
romanticismo son ideales dominantes. Los futuros estudios sobre el pentecostalismo y la sexualidad
deberı́an estar menos centrados en temas religiosos y más firmemente arraigados en las etnografı́as
de las culturas sexuales de los jóvenes.
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