Desirable rights: same-sex sexual subjectivities, socio-economic transformations, global flows and boundaries – in India and beyond

Boyce, Paul (2014) Desirable rights: same-sex sexual subjectivities, socio-economic transformations, global flows and boundaries – in India and beyond. Culture, Health and Sexuality, 16 (10). pp. 1201-1215. ISSN 1369-1058

Full text not available from this repository.

Abstract

Sexual rights are increasingly and unevenly advanced internationally as constitutive of progressive legal possibilities for same-sex desiring subjects. Legislative progress in this area has taken place in the context of recognition of same-sex sexual subjects within the globalising flow of neo-liberal political-economic ideologies in some parts of the word, and resurgent homophobia as a countervailing trend elsewhere (or indeed even within the same context). Ambivalent responses to sexual rights praxis in people's day-to-day lives indicate complex relationships between sexual subjectivity, economy, law, the state, and people's most intimate aspirations. Rights on grounds of same-sex sexualities may or may not be perceived as universally desirable, even among those people who might otherwise be imagined as their beneficiaries. Given this, the relationship between sexual subjectivities, political economies, and rights must be understood in terms of multifaceted refractions, attending to generative and curtailing possibilities – imagined in people's differing responses to free-market capital, legislation, and possibilities for livelihood. These issues are explored in respect of ethnographic work in West Bengal, India, with a particular focus on male-bodied subjects who evince both masculine and feminine subjectivities, and in respect of recent contestations in law, polity, and sexual rights praxis.

Item Type: Article
Schools and Departments: School of Global Studies > Anthropology
Subjects: G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > GN Anthropology
Depositing User: Catrina Hey
Date Deposited: 16 Dec 2014 12:31
Last Modified: 16 Dec 2014 12:31
URI: http://srodev.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/51736
📧 Request an update