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Madam, Give Me My Sex

Additional information

By

R. Raj Rao

Publisher

Bloomsbury

Year Published

2009

Language

English

Description

In a University known as the Oxford of the East, situated in India’s cultural capital, Poona, all is not well in the English Department. The department is headed by Professor Tiwari, who has ambitions to make it one of the best departments in the country. But factors beyond his control thwart him. Principal among these is the State’s reservation policy which ties his hands. Open Category faculty cannot be given tenure; although they have foreign PhDs, they are shunted to contractual posts.

On the other hand, Reserved Category faculty must be compulsorily appointed to permanent positions, even if they are academically unsound. The department faces gender and sexuality issues, with the Director of the Women’s Studies Centre accusing Professor Tiwari of patriarchy and misogyny and a gay professor becoming a victim of homophobia.

Foreign students cry foul, complaining of monetary and sexual exploitation. There are faction fights between student unions affiliated with rival political parties, and newspaper reporters hover around the department for sensational news. A hunger strike by students soon after Professor Tiwari’s retirement perplexes the Vice Chancellor, who issues an unprecedented administrative order in University history.

Political events such as the demolition of the Babri Masjid, 9/11, Godhra, the Bombay attacks, and the reading down and subsequent re-criminalization of Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code form the backdrop of the novel.

ISBN:  978-9389000535

R. Raj Rao is a writer, poet, and teacher of literature and one of India’s leading gay-rights activists. His 2003 novel, The Boyfriend, is one of the first gay novels to come from India. Rao was one of the first recipients of the newly established QuebecIndia awards. R. Raj Rao is the author of almost a dozen poetry, fiction, plays, biography, and criticism books.
His collection of poems, BomGay, was made into an uncensored short film by the late Riyad Wadia in 1996. Perhaps no other Indian writer’s personal, literary and academic life is steeped in queer culture as much as R. Raj Rao’s.
He is a former Professor and Head of the Department of English at the Savitribai Phule Pune University.
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