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020 ▼a 9781085792653
035 ▼a (MiAaPQ)AAI13886141
040 ▼a MiAaPQ ▼c MiAaPQ ▼d 247004
0820 ▼a 323
1001 ▼a Nataraj, Shakthi.
24510 ▼a Trans-formations: Projects of Resignification in Tamil Nadu's Transgender Rights Movement.
260 ▼a [S.l.]: ▼b University of California, Berkeley., ▼c 2019.
260 1 ▼a Ann Arbor: ▼b ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, ▼c 2019.
300 ▼a 145 p.
500 ▼a Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 81-04, Section: A.
500 ▼a Advisor: Briggs, Charles L.
5021 ▼a Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Berkeley, 2019.
506 ▼a This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
506 ▼a This item must not be added to any third party search indexes.
520 ▼a As the term "transgender" rapidly gains traction worldwide- becoming, for many, key to accessing state recognition and medical access- it maps in irregular and ambivalent ways onto other legal and cultural frameworks. In India, the Supreme Court has treated the categories of "LGBT" and "transgender" rights in starkly different ways, criminalizing homosexuality while still upholding transgender rights (2013), and then radically reversing its stance in 2018. Rather than assert the singularity of the "local" against the homogenizing impact of the "global," as some research has done, my dissertation examines the reach and implications of these debates in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu by tracking "transgender imaginaries": utopian visions that take the figure of the "transgender woman" as a point of departure to imagine how "changing sex" can allow subjects to speak powerful new kinds of radical "truth," performatively inaugurating new ethical worlds. Transgender imaginaries imply competing "models of sex" (Plemons 2017): metapragmatic models held by social actors, of what constitutes "sex," where it resides, how it is produced, how it is exposed, and what implications "sex" transformations have for the social body at large. I track how my interlocutors continually used the concept at different scales, indexing broad cultural anxieties, while paradoxically marking specific bodies.Chapter I examines how narratives about hijras-India's iconic transgender community of ritual specialists-were interpreted in radically different ways in Chennai by journalists, human rights activists, doctors, public health officials and transgender-identified subjects, indexing anxieties about changing practices of kinship in Chennai, the neoliberalization of healthcare, and the incursion of "foreign" NGOs. Chapter II examines the figure of the thirunangai (meaning "Respectable Woman" in Tamil). "Thirunangai imaginaries" combine models of sex drawn from (a) the pro-Tamil, anti-caste ideologies of the Dravidian movement
590 ▼a School code: 0028.
650 4 ▼a Cultural anthropology.
650 4 ▼a LGBTQ studies.
650 4 ▼a South Asian studies.
690 ▼a 0326
690 ▼a 0492
690 ▼a 0638
71020 ▼a University of California, Berkeley. ▼b Anthropology.
7730 ▼t Dissertations Abstracts International ▼g 81-04A.
773 ▼t Dissertation Abstract International
790 ▼a 0028
791 ▼a Ph.D.
792 ▼a 2019
793 ▼a English
85640 ▼u http://www.riss.kr/pdu/ddodLink.do?id=T15491489 ▼n KERIS ▼z 이 자료의 원문은 한국교육학술정보원에서 제공합니다.
980 ▼a 202002 ▼f 2020
990 ▼a ***1816162
991 ▼a E-BOOK