What price does visibility incur? Is this price an inevitable
part of a rightsseeking enterprise? Does visibility enhance the
potential of gaining equality? Can visibility, as Foucault says in
Discipline and Punish (1979), be a trap?
Oishik Sarkar
Let’s not talk about Section
377 this once. I know that is
a contentious proposition,
since in many ways this archaic
law remains at the core of the
disadvantage that the sexually
marginalised face in India.
Activist, academic and popular
engagements have given Sec. 377
a celebrity status in the realm of
‘queer’ issues in India, which has
overshadowed the many other
realms of conservative sexual
morality that govern the lives of
the sexually marginalised. I don’t
mean to take away our focus from
the immediate need to challenge
and defeat the violence of law that
Sec. 377 unleashes. That challenge
demands all our solidarity. Yet
simultaneously we might want to
look at processes beyond the law
that discipline and disadvantage the sexually marginalised
in India in more insidious ways than the law – processes
from which the law derives its strength to criminalise.
Activism around Sec. 377, increasingly open representations
of the homosexual (albeit several times problematically) in
commercial cinema, Pride Marches in cities like Kolkata,
and endorsement from the likes
of Amartya Sen and Vikram Seth,
have indeed created a much
needed political and cultural
visibility for the queer population
in India. Thanks to the HIV/
AIDS pandemic, focus on the
sexually marginalised as ‘high
risk’ groups has also led to a
pathologised visibility. One way
to understand this visibility is to
weigh its political potential as a
counter-hegemonic development
that confronts heteronormativity
in its face. Yet another way of
understanding this is to measure
the costs of this visibility – who
all are benefiting from it, and
who is losing out? What price
does visibility incur? Is this price
an inevitable part of a rightsseeking
enterprise? Does visibility
enhance the potential of gaining equality? Can visibility, as
Foucault says in Discipline and Punish (1979), be a trap?
Visibilising What?
When we talk about creating visibility as a means of political
recognition – who/ what is it that we want to make visible?
Do we want to make visible queer people, or do we want to
make visible non-heteronormative practices? One could say
that the visibility of queer people automatically foregrounds
practices that subvert heteronormativity. I would like to
complicate this causal connection. For instance, Butch-
Femme lesbian relationships have on several occasions
been characterised as hetero-mimicries. Though a highly
contested stand that understands heterosexuality as an a
priori condition of human existence, such characterisation
continues even within queer
circles. Here we have the coming
together of a particular kind of
identity (lesbian) accompanied
by a particular kind of practice/
performance (Butch-Femme),
which when open to varied
interpretations, subverts, but also
conforms to heteronormativity.
Let’s take another example. I have
a friend who is biologically male,
but ‘feels’ like a woman. Now
this woman who he feels like has
same sex preferences. So when
he seeks out someone to have
sex with that person will be a
woman. But when we look from a
distance, what do we see? We see a
heterosexual couple having sex. In
actuality, however, if the woman
she is having sex with is a lesbian
– they are having lesbian sex. If
the woman is heterosexual then
we fall short of our vocabulary to
characterise the kind of sex they
are having. This example makes
clear the indeterminacy of both
sexual identities and practices and
cautions us of avoiding the trap of
equating one with the other.
The need to distinguish sexual
practice and identity becomes
important if we are to work on a ‘visiblising’ project. In our
attempt at breaking the silence around queer sexualities do
we sometimes end up further calibrating already existing
sexual hierarchies? The concept of ‘sexual hierarchy’ was
introduced by American anthropologist Gayle Rubin in her
influential essay ‘Thinking Sex’ where she discusses how
hierarchies of sexual value function in the same ways as
ideological systems of racism, ethnocentrism and religious
orthodoxy: ‘They rationalize the well-being of the sexually
privileged and the adversity of the
sexually rabble’. Rubin outlines
the rules of sexual conduct
which currently have created a
sexual hierarchy which places
heterosexual, monogamous,
married, reproductive sex at the
top – what she calls the ‘charmed
circle’. Anything deviating from
this position is placed below in
varying degrees – referred by
her as the ‘outer limits’.
Rubin draws up her hierarchy on
the basis of sexual acts and not
identities. But what happens when
we infuse the notion of identity
into a sexual hierarchy? Gay
men are generally lower in the
hierarchy because it is assumed
that they have homosexual sex.
However, what happens to a Gay
man who is forced into marriage,
and thus has heterosexual sex
with his wife? Where will he
be on the hierarchy? Will he be
considered heterosexual because
of his practice and placed on
top of the hierarchy, or will be
considered Gay because of his
identity and pushed down? Or
will he be considered bisexual, if
he carries on having homosexual
sex while being married to a
woman? What would happen to
a heterosexual man who falls in
the ‘men who have sex with men’
(MSM) category? Where will my
friend be on the hierarchy – will
‘he’ be identified as a lesbian, or
a heterosexual? What would we
consider Sita and Radha from
Deepa Mehta’s film Fire to be
– lesbians in a marital fix, or
frustrated housewives having sex
with each other because their
husbands wouldn’t?
A possible approach to answering
these questions will be to raise
the issue of ‘coming out’ – the
powerful political act of making
visible your own sexuality. One
could say that a person’s position
on the sexual hierarchy gets
determined by what he/ she
articulates as his/ her sexuality.
Thus, while coming out could be a
powerful assertion of self-identity,
it also results in exacerbating the
incidence of disadvantage on the
sexually marginalised. However,
coming out is enmeshed in its
own politics.
A couple of years back I had
noted in an article that as a queer
person I did not ever feel the
need to come out – and asked if
that will act as a disqualification
for me to be a part of the queer
movement, because coming out
is looked at as a kind of baptism
that all queer people should take
on to join the movement for
claiming rights. I had critiqued
that understanding stating that
the term ‘queer’ though allencompassing
of a whole range of
non-heteronormative sexualities
has an in-built process of creating
its own normative standards.
While I stand by my critique, I do
realise that my ability to disavow
the importance of coming out
had so much to do with my class
and sexual preference. Although I
consider myself to be queer, I still
am a practicing heterosexual, and
from a higher socio-economic
class – a position that buttresses
any possibility of disadvantage
that I might face because of
being queer. This might not
be the case for several queer
people for whom the feeling of
liberation and self-confidence
that accompanies coming out is
worth the price that needs to be
paid for becoming visible – in the
eyes of a homophobic society and
the criminal law. Yet, I would still
tend to believe that the practice
of coming out does remain a
preserve of those who have
the currency of a language that
defines and temporally situates
‘coming out’ as a moment in time
that queer people are expected
to go through, much like all
educated people are expected to
graduate.
When class and caste intersect
with sexuality, this might not
be the case. The so-called
‘indigenous’ Indian sexualities
of Kothis, Panthis and Hijras,
among others, face an existential
disadvantage in comparison to
the contemporarily articulated
identities of Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual, Transgender (LGBT).
And this disadvantage exists
even when Hijras haven’t had to
ceremonially come out in the
way those identified as lesbians
and gays have had to. Further, the
disadvantage faced by Hijras seems
more connected to their class
status than sexuality, or rather
because of the coming together of
both.
There is a certain level of passive
tolerance regarding Hijras in
Indian society. They’ve always
been more visible in comparison
to the LGBT – as harem keepers
of kings, to singers at childbirths
and weddings, to beggars on the
train. We seem to have accorded
them a liminal space on the
margins of society as neither men
nor women. But while their sexual
identity has been ‘normalised’
as deviant, their class and caste
identity situates them much below
the LGBT on a sexual hierarchy.
This is because the hierarchy
is not only representative of a
scale of most and least legitimate
sexualities, but one that shows how, if one goes down that
scale, a whole host of fundamental citizenship rights – like
employment, education, shelter etc. – deplete. While Sec
377 can be interpreted to directly criminalise Gay men, it
is still Hijras who routinely face incarceration and police
violence because of their hypervisibility in public spaces
like streets. Their visibility thus becomes an existential trap
for them. Unlike lesbians, gays or bisexuals who have to
articulate their sexuality for making them visible, for Hijras it is written on their body.
Our position on the sexual
hierarchy gets further
complicated when we confront
some more troubling questions
like: can there be a right-wing
homosexual? Or are these
identities diametrically opposite
to each other? Could we have
had several queer people voting
for Modi in Gujarat? If yes, what
would these people foreground
as their identity – Hindus or
homosexuals? Or can they ‘come
out’ as Hindu homosexuals who
are voting for a Hindu nation?
Where will their place be on the
sexual hierarchy if religion also
gets infused in the determinants
of calibration and scale?
In the case of the Fascist queer –
will the project of making visible
entail a responsibility on others
to ‘expose’ their fascist ideology,
or will it mean to invisibilise their
sexuality, because it if becomes
visible they will be persecuted
by the very ideology that they
espouse? Can there be a lesbian
woman, a senior executive in a
multinational, who hails Tata for
manufacturing the Nano, blames
Medha Patkar for stalling India’s
economic growth, and chastises her heterosexual sister
for falling in love with a lower caste man? Where will her
place be on the hierarchy, what will be her stakes in making
visible her identity?
The reasons for raising these questions is not to discredit
the power of visibility, but to come to terms with the fact
that visibility means different things for different people
across the queer spectrum, and does not necessarily have
an unqualified emancipatory potential. It also becomes
important for us to question
whether we can assume that
by the virtue of being queer
one can respond favourably to
other experiences of exclusion
– especially when issues of
class and caste related privilege
intersect with queerness. As I
write this article, it is imperative
on my part to question whether
the very label of ‘queer’, and my
fluent use of the term, can in
itself be a signifier of privilege
and access.
Privatising Visibility
It has been a queer feature of
queer rights movements across
the world that the articulation
of the power of visibility has
co-existed with the demand for
the right to privacy. While the
contents and consequences of
visibility and privacy might be
understood as being antithetical
to each other, there is a logic that
informs this strategy. The need
for creating visibility arises from
the imposed invisibilisation of
queer people, which serves as the
reason for their exclusion from
rights guarantees. The claim for
privacy rights is to say that what
people do in private spaces – what
kind of sex they have – is not the
business of the state, and cannot
be a ground for criminalising the
act or the persons engaging in them just because they don’t
meet standards of heteronormativity.
The right to privacy has been a ground on the basis of
which the UN Human Rights Committee, in the 1994
case of Toonen vs Australia, declared that anti-sodomy laws
infringe upon human rights; it
has been the basis for challenging
the controversial 1993 ‘don’t
ask, don’t tell’ policy for the
armed forces in US; and in India
it has been used as a ground for
demanding the repeal of Sec.
377.
In 2001 the Naz Foundation,
a group working with MSMs
and other sexually marginalized
people, filed a petition in the
Delhi High Court (still pending)
asking for the section to be
‘read down’. Looking at the
petition closely what emerges as
a concern is the demand of the
petition to read down the section
and de-criminalise consensual,
adult and private sex. Though
ostensibly representative of the
entire community of the sexually
marginalised, the petition openly
attempts at giving legitimacy
to private sex, excluding many
people who can only or would
like to engage in acts of sexual
intimacy in public. In effect,
communities like the Hijras, are
squarely excluded from the ambit
of the petition’s demands. The
issue here is not whether the
petition should have demanded
for ‘sex in public’, but that it
wasn’t attentive to the slippery
slope of the privacy claim – the
fact that access to private space is
a matter of privilege. What plays out is a process through
which the ‘outer limits’ of Rubin’s sexual hierarchy gets
further calibrated – and Hijras are pushed further down by
the queer community itself. The notion of visibility here
gets privatised by those within the movement who are
higher up on the queer ladder of privilege.
The Price of Visibility.
In January 2005, a stall set up by
Amitie – a collective that works
on issues of alternative sexualities
and HIV/ AIDS in Chandannagore,
West Bengal – at the Rishra Book
Fair was forcibly evicted from the
fair because they had displayed
posters and pamphlets on issues
of homosexuality, safe sex and
HIV/ AIDS awareness and were
selling magazines and other
literature on issues of sexual
diversity, health and rights. The
fair organisers alleged that public
sentiment was hurt because of
the ‘obscene’ materials that were
on display at Amitie’s stall. Amitie
challenged this arbitrary eviction
in the Kolkata High Court, but
their petition was dismissed on
the ground that the material
displayed at the stall was about
homosexuality, and not about
HIV/ AIDS..
Only recently on February 4,
2008, the police in Bombay raided
a private party and arrested six
men, and seized liquor bottles and
condoms. The police crackdown
was planned because details of
the party were allegedly advertised on a gay web site and
circulated through cell phone text messaging.
What do we make of these incidents? All those who were
‘busted’, were paying a price for making themselves
visible. Clearly, one of the major perils of visibility is
the resultant infringement on the freedom of speech and
expression. Interestingly, it is not information on HIV/
AIDS or safe sex that is necessarily under the scanner of
the law, but it is information that ‘promotes’ (read: makes
public) homosexuality – where suddenly their ‘high risk’
health status is transformed into
‘high risk’ criminality. The fact
that a private party was busted
in this case, and the private
premises of an organization like
the Naz Foundation in Lucknow
were raided, suggests that in the
eyes of the law, those were public
incidents that had to be clamped
down on. In case of the book
fair, it was an attempt at erasure
of public visibility, in effect
shrouding it under the cloak of
silence, or privacy. Thus, both
visibility and privacy can get used
as justifications to delegitimise and
criminalise queer collectivisation,
association and expression.
One way to read the incidents is
to consider the repercussions of
their visibility as a price worth
paying. The other way of reading it
is to ask whether the political plot
of gaining recognition through
visibility has gone awry, because it
has become inextricably linked to
issues of health and hygiene – links
that have also been reinforced
by the queer movement. One
could say that an almost singular
engagement with the repeal of
Sec 377 by the movement and
accompanying claims around the right to privacy has led to
privacy and visibility working against each other.
Towards a Politics of
‘Counter-Heteronormativity’
Should invisibility be a way to avoid the Foucauldian trap?
Or is there a need to conceptualise visibility differently?
Being part of the upper class ‘queer’ community in India,
I believe that we need to challenge not just dominant
heteronormativity, but also our own discomfort with
difference. We cannot privilege
sexual orientation/ preference/
identity as the most significant
sexual difference among us. Or
else we are in danger of creating
our own sexual ‘lower orders’.
What is an immediate need in the
present context of living as queer
people, in a highly sex-phobic
nation, is to historicise sexuality
– not only to invoke the ‘past’ but
also to document what Foucault
calls the ‘histories of the present’.
I do not, however, suggest a
project that will exclusively
excavate the ‘truth’ about the
plural traditions of ‘Indian’
sexuality and thus lend legitimacy
to the rights claims of the sexually
marginalised, simply to avoid
engaging with a counter-cultural
move against the argument which
says that homosexuality is a western import. Because that
might, in the long run, impose fixated meanings to ‘Indian’
sexualities, thus excluding many more emerging forms of
‘post-modern’ sexualities. Instead, what might be a more
useful means to capture the ‘histories of the present’ will be
to identify those political assertions that can understood as
‘counter-heteronormative’. By ‘counter-heteronormative’
Nivedita Menon, professor of political science at Delhi
University, refers to ‘a range of political assertions that
implicitly or explicitly challenge heteronormativity and
the institutions of monogamous
patriarchal marriage’. These
assertions travel through the
corridors of law – when 377 is
being challenged; on the streets
– when Hijras come out to
protest against police atrocities;
and in conferences, where a sole
panel on sexuality attempts to
disrupt the peace with which we
intellectualise, and through the
daily negotiations for survival
that the sexually marginalised
engage in.
When liminality offers cruel
possibilities of invisibilisation at
every step, the queer person’s
travails of existence demand a
redefinition of ‘resistance’ – not
just as political participation in
rallies, films on queer desire,
challenges to Sec. 377 – but
the daily negotiations and choices about conformity and
transgression. This is where ‘counter-heteronormative’
histories get written. What then gets foregrounded are
layered realities of ‘deviant’ lives – married homosexual
men, hijra sex workers, Muslim lesbians and Dalit kothis.
The potential of such a politics is the emergence of
languages of resistance out of the very existence of the
sexually marginalised – as a subject that disrupts the
dominant norms of heterosexuality, queer sexuality and as
well as the law.
Oishik Sircar is a human rights lawyer and researcher and
presently Graduate Scholar in Women’s Rights at the Faculty
of Law, University of Toronto. He has previously worked as a
campaigner with Amnesty International India and has taught
at the Women’s Studies Centre, University of Pune. He works
in the areas of postcolonial feminist legal theory, sexual
rights, migration studies and cultures of human rights.