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Whistling in the Dark: Twenty-One Queer Interviews

Additional information

By

Dibyajyoti Sarma, R. Raj Rao

Publisher

SAGE

Year Published

2009

Language

English

Description

Whistling in the Dark: Twenty-one Queer Interviews focuses on issues like sexuality, sexual identity, marriage, gay marriage, heteronormativity, gay utopia, gay activism, gay bashing, police atrocities and the laws vis-à-vis these. The interviewees represent a cross-section of society ranging from university professors, gay rights activists and students, on the one hand, to working-class men such as office boys, auto-rickshaw drivers and even undertrials who have served prison sentences, on the other.

The thought-provoking narratives in this book are the outcome of probing and incisive questions put to the respondents by the editors R. Raj Rao and Dibyajyoti Sarma. Appealing to a wide readership, the narratives go beyond the conventional and provide a rare insight into the private lives of the respondents. Besides being a must-read for gay activists and organisations, the book will also be a useful resource for post-graduate students and academics working in the fields of sexuality studies, feminism and alternative literature.

 

Contents

Introduction
Hoshang Merchant
Sushil Patil
Manish Pawar
Kama Maureemootoo
Christopher Benninger and Ram Naidu
Satish Ranadive
Mahohar Shitole
Thomas Waugh
Narendra Binner
Arman Pasha
Aslam Shaikh
Ana Garcia-Arroyo
Avinash Gaitonde
Ankit Gupta
Ganesh Holay
Raja Chandraratne
Darius Ankleshwaria
Dilip Sheth
Shivji Panikkar
Mohammad Soltani
Bindumadhav Khire

 

ISBN: 9789386446497

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.
 Dibyajyoti Sarma
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