Identity politics, law and queerness in India: Reflections on six years since Navtej
While visibility is crucial, focusing solely on it can short-circuit the more profound understanding of how queer identities are socially and materially produced, write Aditya Krishna and Sagrika Rajora.
Aditya Krishna
Published on: 19 September 2024, 12:58 pm

While visibility is crucial, focusing solely on it can short-circuit the more profound understanding of how queer identities are socially and materially produced, write Aditya Krishna and Sagrika Rajora.
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THIS sixth of September marked six years since the judgment in Navtej Singh Johar versus Union of India. There is a celebratory remembrance of the watershed moment in progressive circles in India. However, to many, these temporal celebrations appear like empty fronts of evasive 'solidarities', which overshadow the years of struggle and activism that transcended mere nominal demands.
It is nobody's case that the decriminalisation of homosexuality was a nominal demand, but the sixth anniversary of Navtej is an opportune moment to reflect upon queer activism in the country and the mainstream socio-legal discourse outlining this activism.
“To many, the temporal celebrations around decriminalisation of homosexuality appear like empty fronts of evasive 'solidarities'.
Globalisation and neoliberalism have played a crucial role in shaping the contemporary discourse on queer identity. With the proliferation of Western ideals of democracy and liberal tolerance through global markets, the acceptance of queer identities has become increasingly commodified.