Nigerian Practices of Male-to-Female Cross-Dressing: Exploring Gender Transgressions in Digital Youth Culture
The proposed project, CROSSING (which is being coordinated by the Centre for Cultural Studies), examines how selected Nigerian youths adopt cross-dressing and concomitant expressions to transgress normative gender roles on social media. In most parts of Africa, gender non-conformance is criminalised. As a result, transvestism is shunned and Nigerian scholars have largely failed to study the un/framing of gender beyond the binary structure. In the few instances in which they have studied acts of transvestism, they have assessed them in line with governmental viewpoints, as acts of derisory subjects.
Focusing on male-to-female cross-dressing (MCD) and transvestism on online platforms such as Instagram, Facebook and TikTok, this study aims at filling a blatant research gap and at countering partial research perspectives. Focusing on the social media performances of Idris Okuneye (Bobrisky), James Brown (Princess of Africa), and Daniel Anthony Nsikan (Jay Boogie), CROSSING argues that these characters cross-dress and adopt gender non-conforming identities to construct new selves and challenge the political status quo. By way of online performances, they counter legal constraints and contest their social and cultural exclusion.
| Duration | 15.09.2025 - 31.10.2027 |
| Funding Funding programme | European Commission HEU |
| Grant amount | € 230.185 |
| Unit | Department of English Studies |
| Profile area Uni Graz | |
| Core research area of the Faculty | |
| Principal investigator | Univ.-Prof. Dr. Christine Schwanecke |
| Project staff | Amaefula, Rowland Chukwuemeka, PhD |
| Project homepage |