ABSTRACT

The book argues that there is no monolithic homosexuality; there are only homosexualities, that is, there are as many reasons for being gay as there are gays. Some people are born gay, some have gayness thrust upon them, and some do, indeed, achieve to great gayness. Representation of homosexuality/homoeroticism, as it is understood today, is thus a western import. The act and public/social discourses on same-sex love are still illegal; it is, according to many, against the Indian ‘tradition’; and a sense of ‘history’ is seriously problematic when we dig out for a past tradition of homoerotic love and desire. Hoshang Merchant, through an examination of texts, films, poetry, attempts to analyse and crack the codes of sexual (mis)conduct in contemporary India, giving short histories of the fate of several gay writers and explaining the difficulties of ‘coming out’.



part I|46 pages

Book of the Self

part II|71 pages

Book of the World

chapter 3|4 pages

Urdu gay literature: Poetry

chapter 4|11 pages

Hindi Gay Literature

chapter 5|13 pages

Gay Theatre

chapter 6|34 pages

Gay Films

part III|139 pages

Book of the Soul

chapter 7|26 pages

Sultan Padamsee: A Pioneer Gay Poet?

chapter 10|13 pages

Agha Shahid Ali's gay nation

chapter 11|25 pages

the anxiety of coming out: Vikram Seth

chapter 12|27 pages

Suniti Namjoshi

chapter 13|9 pages

Dinyar Godrej: his mother's son

chapter 14|17 pages

the art of Bhupen Khakhar (1935–2005)

chapter |3 pages

Afterword: My Poetry