The Phobic and the Erotic: The Politics of Sexualities in Contemporary IndiaBrinda Bose, Subhabrata Bhattacharyya A flamboyantly eclectic anthology that explodes the myths about the lines which divide us - the heterosexual from the homosexual, the normative from the 'alternative', the phobic from the obsessive, the moral from the titillating, the academic from the activist. The Phobic and the Erotic brings together a stunning array of serious, committed writing about what is both most visible and most hidden in our lives: our sexualities. While our social and cultural lives are determined by a fairly universal heterosexual code, this anthology argues that it is imperative to recognize multiple sites and discourses as equally valid. It 'outs' the 'alternative'. Constructed on the premise that it is time to foreground those sexual choices and identities that are counter-hetero-normative as the sites at which the most significant politics are being played out, The Phobic and the Erotic captures the complex issues, theories, contexts and debates crowding the sexualities arena in contemporary Indian society. |
Contents
Preludes | 1 |
IN THEORY | 17 |
and the Politics of AntiColonial Sexual Dissidence | 91 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Phobic and the Erotic: The Politics of Sexualities in Contemporary India Brinda Bose,Subhabrata Bhattacharyya No preview available - 2007 |
Common terms and phrases
appear argued asked become behaviour bisexual body called claim coming constituted context couples Court cultural Delhi desire discourse emergence essay example existence experience expression fact feel female feminist film Fire gender give global groups heterosexual hijra Hindu homosexual human idea identity images important India individual interesting issues kothis lesbian lives look male marriage married means moral move movement nature normative Notes organized particular performance perhaps person play political position possible practices Press queer question refer relations relationship risk role same-sex seen sense sexual social society South Asian space speech story studies suggest talk theory things tion turn understanding University Western woman women writes