Transgender India: Understanding Third Gender Identities and Experiences provides the first scholarly study of hijras, transmen, and other third gender Indians from the perspective of a range of disciplines in the behavioral and social sciences, as well as the humanities. This book fosters a dialogue across academic fields, as authors cross-reference each other’s chapters, comparing and contrasting their views of transgender experience and identity in India. This multidisciplinary approach helps readers understand the complex interplay of factors that have led to discrimination against third gender individuals, as well as paths forward to a more equitable and just future, in ways that go beyond the perspective of a single academic field. This multidisciplinary approach is the book’s most distinctive feature in comparison to existing works limited to individual fields such as anthropology, investigative journalism, and history. The broad scope of Transgender Indiais relevant to scholars and students in diverse disciplines who seek a greater and more nuanced understanding of the behavioral and societal impact of these issues.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1. Introduction. Transgender to Transperson: An Overview of Indian Histories of Self, Sex, and Society.- Par T 1. LITERATURE.- Chapter 2. Re-writing the Subject and the Self: A Study of Hijra Life Writings.- Chapter 3. Queer Futurities in Arundhati Roy’s
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness.- Chapter 4. Indian Influences and the Transgender Imagination in the Chinese Literary Classic
Journey to the West (
西遊記.- Part 2.- History Chapter 5. Contradiction and Concurrence of Castration and the Fertile Phallus: A Transgender Reading of Ancient Indian Literature and Contemporary Hijra Experience.- Chapter 6. The Colonial Censu(re/ses) of Transbodies in Nineteenth-Century South Asia. Part 3. Law.- Chapter 7. Differs in Dignity: Shame, Privacy, and Law.- Chapter 8. Time to “Act”: Guaranteeing Full Citizenship of Transgender Individuals in India.- Par T 4. HEALTH AND EMPLOYMENT.- Chapter 9. Exploring the Psychosocial Needs of Third Gender People Living with HIV in Hyderabad, India.- Chapter 10. Employability Issues of Transgender Individuals in Gujarat, India: An Analysis of the Origin.- Part 5. Transmen.- Chapter 11. Female Masculinities and Women of Third Nature: Analyzing the Gender and Sexual Politics of Identity and Visibility of Alternative Masculinities through Indian Mythologies and Literary Narratives. Chapter.- 12. “Families We Choose”: Kinship Patterns among Migrant Transmen in Bangalore, India.
Über den Autor
Douglas A. Vakoch is president of METI International and professor emeritus of clinical psychology at the California Institute of Integral Studies. He has edited or co-edited more than twenty books covering gender studies, cross-cultural studies, psychology, sustainability, and the search for life beyond Earth, including Transecology: Transgender Perspectives on Environment and Nature (Routledge, 2021), Altruism in Cross-Cultural Perspective (Springer, 2013), and Climate Psychology in a Pandemic: Environmental Health in Lockdown (Oxford University Press, 2022). His formal education spans a range of disciplines that inform Transgender India: clinical psychology (Ph D, Stony Book University), history and philosophy of science (MA, University of Notre Dame), and religion (BA, Carleton College). His work has been featured in such publications as The New York Times, The Economist, Nature, and Science, and he has been interviewed for numerous radio and television programs, including those broadcast on the BBC, The Science Channel, and The Discovery Channel.