BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Europe/London
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZNAME:GMT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
DTSTART:19701025T020000
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=10;BYDAY=-1SU
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZNAME:BST
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
DTSTART:19700329T010000
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=3;BYDAY=-1SU
END:DAYLIGHT
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:6a290cdb28197
DTSTAMP:20260610T070603Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20231101T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20231101T190000
TZID:Europe/London
SUMMARY:Holding some ground on a greasy dancefloor:  Caste, Queerness and South Asian Diaspora in the UK'
DESCRIPTION:The first in an occasional speaker series     Date: 1 November 2023  Time: 17.00  Venue: Arts Seminar 1    Sweaty, seductive sex club on a Saturday night in London, and amidst some raunchy Bollywood music someone whispers to you a shloka. In the nudity of a sauna in Leicester, a stranger who desires you, randomly asks you your caste. We can have weird encounters in the most unanticipated ways and in the strangest of places -- even when they reek of desire, sexuality, and possible freedoms. When I came to England for a short fellowship, I was prepared I might face racial othering, but I wasn't expecting caste. And yet the first message I received on Grindr asked, 'Are you a Brahmin?'.     The vagaries of caste are often seen as restricted to the South Asian subcontinent, and its diaspora and her queerness only seen through its racialized othering. Using anecdotes and stories from desi queer encounters in the UK, my presentation reveals colonial continuities of caste among South Asian queer lives. While we question dominant framings of sexualities that originate in the West as insufficient to explain lives elsewhere, I ask, what happens to the Dalit queer lover when desires among us continue to be coded through upper caste-class framings? Challenging the homogenous idea of a South Asian queer community, this presentation highlights subcontinental geopolitical divisions, religious differences, caste hierarchies, and communal obligations in shaping diasporic queer spaces and subjectivities.       BIO:    Dhiren Borisa is a Dalit queer activist, poet, and urban sexual geographer, and is currently employed as Assistant Professor at Jindal Global Law School, India. He is presently in the UK working on his first monograph as Urban Studies Foundation International fellow and a visiting researcher at the University of Sheffield. He is also an honorary visiting fellow at the School of Geography, Geology, and Environment at the University of Leicester, UK. He  attained his Ph.D. from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi on Queer Cartographies of Desires in Delhi. His research primarily focuses in studying caste and class dynamics in sexual mappings and makings of cities from an intersectional and decolonial lens both among queer spaces in India and in diasporic queer worldings. https://events.st-andrews.ac.uk/events/holding-some-ground-on-a-greasy-dancefloor-caste-queerness-and-south-asian-diaspora-in-the-uk/
LOCATION:Arts Building, The Scores, St Andrews, Fife, Scotland, KY16 9AX
URL:https://events.st-andrews.ac.uk/events/holding-some-ground-on-a-greasy-dancefloor-caste-queerness-and-south-asian-diaspora-in-the-uk/
End:VEVENT
End:VCALENDAR
