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INVISIBLE MEN : Inside India's Transmasculine Network

By: Language: English Publication details: USA Viking 2018/01/01Edition: 1Description: 503ISBN:
  • 9780670090143
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 306.768092 NAN
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Lending Lending Ernakulam Public Library General Stacks Non-fiction 306.768092 NAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available E191595

Female-to-male transgender people, or transmasculine people as they are called, are just beginning to form their networks in India. But their struggles are not visible to a gender-normative society that barely notices, much less acknowledges, them. While transwomen have gained recognition through the extraordinary efforts of activists and feminists, the brotherhood, as the transmasculine network often refers to itself, remains imponderable, diminished even within the transgender community. For all intents and purposes, they do not exist. In a country in which parents wish their daughters were sons, they exile the daughters who do become sons.
In this remarkable, intimate book, Nandini Krishnan burrows deep into the prejudices encountered by India's transmen, the complexities of hormonal transitions and sex reassignment surgery, issues of social and family estrangement, and whether socioeconomic privilege makes a difference. With frank, poignant, often idiosyncratic interviews that braid the personal with the political, the informative with the offhand, she makes a powerful case for inclusivity and a non-binary approach to gender.
Above all, she asks the question: what does manhood really mean?

Nandini Krishnan
Nandini is a writer, journalist, stage actor and comedian. Her first book is Hitched: The Modern Woman and Arranged Marriage (Random House, 2013). Her latest book is Invisible Men: Inside India's Transmasculine Networks (Penguin Random House, 2018). An extract from her novel-in-progress was one of the five winners of the Caravan and Writers of India Festival contest, 2014. She is also a playwright and alumna of the Writers' Bloc workshop conducted by the Royal Court Theatre, London. Nandini lives in Madras, where she spends most of her day rescuing her manuscripts and her favourite books from the eight dogs and four cats who own her.

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