Androgyny & Female Impersonation in India: Nari Bhav

Androgyny & Female Impersonation in India: Nari Bhav

Androgyny & Female Impersonation in India: Nari Bhav

Androgyny & Female Impersonation in India: Nari Bhav

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Overview

• A cross-cultural exploration of one of the most fascinating subjects to be questioned and criticized in the twenty-first century: the gender binary
• This book accesses what many westerners believe to be a modern preoccupation, through the lens of India's historically and culturally significant 'third gender'

Androgyny is an engaging subject of discussion and research in present times. This volume makes an effort to understand concepts of androgyny and 'nari bhav', or sensibility of the feminine beyond the anatomy-directed definitions, which are loosened by the nebulous realm of the third sex, or third gender. Various literary and performative traditions in India emphasize the interrelatedness of art and society. They suggest that the concept of 'nari bhav' comes from a deeply rooted cultural belief in the fluidity of female and male (symbolized, for example, by deities like Ardhanariswara). This belief, that the constant interplay of duality engenders balance and harmony in both personal and social aspects of human life, forms the basis of female impersonation in India, alongside the acknowledgment of the existence of male and female physiological and/or emotional-psychological tendencies within each individual. Such perception urges more inclusiveness in social attitudes, and easier acceptance of different sexualities and ways of expressing gender. This volume discusses concepts of androgyny that permeate the Indian cultural ethos, which are expressed through female impersonators not only in religion, theatre and dance but also in contemporary performative mediums like films, television, and the internet. This volume also contains interviews with performers of female impersonation.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789385285462
Publisher: Niyogi Books
Publication date: 03/13/2017
Pages: 356
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Tutun Mukherjee is Professor of Comparative Literature, University of Hyderabad, India; she has also taught courses at the university's Centre for Women's Studies and the Department of Theatre Arts. Her specialization is Literary Criticism & Theory, and her research interests include translation, women's writing, theatre and film studies. She has written extensively on these subjects, which overlap in her work. Besides articles and book chapters in national and international journals, as single author and editor her publications include I.A. Richards: Contribution to New Criticism and Chicago Critics: An Evaluation, and she jointly edited Companion to Comparative Literature, World Literature and Comparative Cultural Studies. She is on the editorial team of several journals and is a reviewer for many publishers. Niladri R. Chatterjee is Professor, Department of English, University of Kalyani, West Bengal. His doctoral work was on the novelist Christopher Isherwood. A recipient of the Fulbright Scholarship and the British Council-Charles Wallace Fellowship, he co-edited The Muffled Heart: Stories of the Disempowered Male, contributed to The American Isherwood, and so on. He has published in the journal American Notes and Queries and Intersection, and has recently begun contributing to The Wire. He has reviewed for Gay and Lesbian Review Worldwide (US). He has been teaching a course in gender studies at his university since 2009, and runs a facebook group called New Gender Studies, which has over 11,200 members.

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