This book is based on long term ethnographic research with hijras, the emblematic figure of South Asian sexual and gender difference in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It proposes the hijra as a counter-cultural formation that embodies not only a direct contrast to hegemonic patterns of masculinity but also as an alternative subculture offering the possibility of varied forms of erotic pleasures and practices otherwise forbidden in mainstream society. While most studies view hijras as an asexual, emasculated, third sex/gender, this book calls into question the phallocentric logic that obscures alternative sites and sources of bodily power and pleasure, emphasizing how hijras craft their own subject position. Ethnographically rich and theoretically engaged, this book will cause a new, global re-examination of both hijras in particular and the wider range of 'male femininities' in general.
By:
Adnan Hossain (Universiteit Utrecht The Netherlands)
Imprint: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Edition: New edition
Dimensions:
Height: 235mm,
Width: 160mm,
Spine: 20mm
Weight: 460g
ISBN: 9781316517048
ISBN 10: 1316517047
Pages: 244
Publication Date: 03 February 2022
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
General/trade
,
Undergraduate
,
ELT Advanced
Format: Hardback
Publisher's Status: Active
Glossary; Introduction: pleasure, power and masculinities; 1. Kinship, community and hijragiri; 2. Class-cultural politics and the making of the hijras; 3. Hijra erotic subjectivities: pleasure, practice and power; 4. The paradox of emasculation; 5. Practices and processes of gendering; 6. Love and emotional intimacy: hijra entanglement with normative Bangla men; 7. Contemporary transformation of hijra subjectivities; Conclusion: shifting meaning and the future of the hijras; References; Index.
Adnan Hossain is Assistant Professor of Gender Studies and Critical Theory at Graduate Gender Program, Utrecht University. His research concerns gender and sexual diversity, heterosexualities, masculinities, transgender and intersex studies, race and ethnic relations, bodies, nationalism, de/post-colonial studies and global inequalities in knowledge production.