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Queer Histories of the Internet Blog

by kaeru last modified Dec 09, 2011 08:53 AM
Nitya Vasudevan (Centre for Study of Culture and Society) and Nithin Manayath (Mount Carmel College) bring forth their research and experience in queer histories of the Internet. The project will examine and theorize the relationship between queerness (Queer is largely used to imply a set of identities and modes of being that work against the narrative of compulsory heterosexuality and to indicate a shift from earlier and more distinct identities such as transgender, lesbian, gay, as a category claiming to be more inclusive and less rigid when it comes to difference.

A critical queerness as Judith Halberstram describes it, in In a Queer Time and Place (New York: NYU Press, 2005), is one that is a mixture of “strange temporalities, imaginative life schedules and eccentric economic practices.” In the work of queer theorists in the West, rather than a string of identities, it becomes a perspective or a conceptual grid through which to theorize structures of normativity and identification. Through the course of our project we seek to draw on queer theory to destabilise this reference to identity alone to include an understanding of queerness as practice, techne and experience, and also, importantly, to locate a culturally specific place for such queerness) and the Internet and address the question of technology (We start with the Heideggerian premise that the essense of technology is not technological but cultural. This view of course is rendered dominant in the case of Internet, where the discourse surrounding it is as much about engendering and sustaining cultures as much as it is about futurity and technological instrumentality) within the field of concerns it has come to generate in the Indian context, on how has the idea of the technological shift, perceived or real, changed the ways in which queer practices and identities are understood, explained or experienced and contribute to a better understanding of the question of technology being asked and answered when it comes to queer experience, practice and knowledge.

Separating the 'Symbiotic Twins'

This post tries to undo the comfortable linking that has come to exist in the ‘radical’ figure of the cyber-queer. And this is so not because of a nostalgic sense of the older ways of performing queerness, or the world of the Internet is fake or unreal in comparison to bodily experience, and ‘real’ politics lies elsewhere. This is so as it is a necessary step towards studying the relationship between technology and sexuality.

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Sexuality, Queerness and Internet technologies in Indian context

Posted by Prasad Krishna at Sep 13, 2010 06:25 PM |
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This blog post lays out the discursive construction of sexuality and queerness as intelligible domains in the Indian context while engaging with ideas of visibility, representation, exclusion, publicness, criminality, difference, tradition, experience, and community that have come into use with the critical responses to queer identities and practices in India.

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A Detour: The Internet and Forms of Narration: A Short Note

Posted by Prasad Krishna at Dec 02, 2010 08:40 PM |

There are a number of blog posts on the Internet about transgendered and transsexual people but there is a separation between print as a medium and Internet as a medium. This blog post informally discusses the authority that attaches to media other than the Internet and how this authority is displaced when it comes to Internet texts of the same nature.

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