"The book is conceptually sophisticated and offers an exceptionally engaging and enlightening examination of how the meaning-making of texts is neither fixed nor stable but rather restless open to multiple meanings by exposing them to different contexts and horizons."
Dr Rory du Plessis, University of Pretoria, South Africa
"Carolins book is an archival work in as much as it is a work of textual analysis and literary criticism; the book details multiple stories of sexual rights in South Africa and archives diverse lived experiences of same-sex intimacies through visual and literary texts."
Dr Grant Andrews, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
"Post-Apartheid Same-Sex Sexualities is an invaluable addition to the growing archive and body of scholarship on same-sex and queer sexualities in South Africa. It is a book which will be important to scholars and students of non-conforming African sexualities and gender identities who have a particular interest in film and literary studies."
Dr Gibson Ncube, Stellenbosch University, South Africa, writing in the Journal of the African Literature Association
[ Post-Apartheid Same-Sex Sexualities] is a queer text in the best possible way. And by this, I mean queer in the way that it was originally conceived of, full of promise, potential and radicalnessa queer that was always aware that its usefulness might end, or be replaced, because queer was theorised as an open signifier without fixed meaning and with no attachable political agenda. Without so much as using the word queer, Carolin has constructed a text that indexes the most radical of thinkers in the area of race, gender and sexuality, thinkers who have refused to be co-opted by the academy or the disciplining field of Queer Theory
Prof Tracey McCormick, University of Johannesburg, South Africa, writing in the Journal of Literary Studies
The monograph convincingly asserts that literary and visual cultures contain repositories of historical same-sex desire that have the potential to upend accepted monolithic narratives. These narratives often erase same-sex sexualities and queer political activism from the official archive of the post-apartheid nation-state
Jarred Thompson, University of Pretoria, South Africa, writing in the journal English in Africa