Aniruddha Dutta is Associate Professor at University of Iowa, USA. Their essays on gender and sexual politics in India have appeared in journals such as Transgender Studies Quarterly, QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking, International Feminist Journal of Politics, and Gender and History.
Aniruddha Dutta’s book based on several years of painstaking fieldwork is a theoretically strong and empirically rich work analysing non elite and non-metropolitan LGBT communities and identities in India. It excellently provides a critical counter narrative to the globalising discourse around queer identities and rights in neoliberal India. * Rohit K. Dasgupta, London School of Economics & Political Science, UK * A paradigm-shifting, timely, and long overdue study. Recasting the analytical purchase of vernacularization, Dutta issues a major intervention in debates around scalar, linguistic, and epistemic hierarchies. By bridging vertical and horizontal traffics of transness, Globalizing through the Vernacular refutes a romanticized idea of cultural authenticity as much as the unidirectional burden of globalization. This book, replete with compelling ethnographic insights, constitutes a major blow to (queer) theory’s stubborn unwillingness to register the power of geopolitical fault lines. * Howard Chiang, author of Transtopia in the Sinophone Pacific *