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This is the first full-length book to provide an introduction to
badhai performances throughout South Asia, examining their
characteristics and relationships to differing contexts in
Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan. Badhai's repertoires of songs,
dances, prayers, and comic repartee are performed by socially
marginalised hijra, khwaja sira, and trans communities. They
commemorate weddings, births and other celebratory heteronormative
events. The form is improvisational and responds to particular
contexts, but also moves across borders, including those of nation,
religion, genre, and identity. This collaboratively authored book
draws from anthropology, theatre and performance studies, music and
sound studies, ethnomusicology, queer and transgender studies, and
sustained ethnographic fieldwork to examine badhai's place-based
dynamics, transcultural features, and communications across the
hijrascape. This vital study explores the form's changing status
and analyses these performances' layered, scalar, and sensorial
practices, to extend ways of understanding hijra-khwaja sira-trans
performance.
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.
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