Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
India

'India's Decision To Recriminalise Homosexuality A Backward Move'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Jan, 2015 02:19 PM
    Of the six novels Welsh author Sarah Waters has written, five have lesbian couples as protagonists and for someone who has championed gay rights through her writings, she was extremely disappointed, like several others, with the Supreme Court's 2013 order recriminalising homosexuality.
     
    "It was very disappointing to know that they were again recriminalised. From the outside world, this decision looked very disappointing," Waters told IANS in an interview on the sidelines of the just-concluded Jaipur Literature Festival.
     
    "It is a backward move because the world is such an odd place for gay people all around the globe. On one hand you have liberal countries and on the other you have countries where it is completely banned," she added.
     
    Even though the 48-year-old doesn't know which way India is headed where conservative movements are challenging the existence of the LGBT community within the Indian social system, Waters hopes things will change for good if the state understands the importance of respecting this community's rights.
     
    While India will take some time to recognise the gay community, Waters was blessed to have grown up in a country that had started to develop liberal views in the early 1990s.
     
    And this, indeed, helped her in coming out of the closet about her sexual identity and being welcomed in an open society where she could marry her partner.
     
    One aspect of society however bothered her constantly.
     
    "There was never the right projection of gay or lesbian couples in the mainstream. Their portrayal in the mainstream medium was confined to certain stereotypes and I wanted to break those myths," she recollected.
     
    Hence she chanced upon the writing territory after completing her doctorate in literature. She was surprised by the almost "negligible" reference of lesbian couples in the historic times and always pondered over how they would have behaved.
     
    "My plan in the first place was to tell a story through a novel that hasn't been told before in the mainstream and I knew I was taking the chance of meeting the present with the past," she said.
     
    "There were depictions about gay life in our history, but it was because only men were arrested then. They were quite flamboyant and would sometimes dress as women...so they had a record. But what about women, what did gay women do?" Waters asked.
     
    It was in this quest that she delved into historical fiction and wrote bestselling novels like "Tipping the Velvet"(1998), "Affinity" (1999), "Fingersmith" (2002) - shorlisted for Man Booker Prize - and "The Little Stranger"(2009), among others.
     
    "These novels are opportunities to explore their lives and try and imagine what it would have been like to be a gay woman in Victorian times," she said.
     
    Without knowing, Waters' writings have made it to mainstream readers and she feels that what she has been able to achieve is to present "positive representations" of the lesbian couples because their relationship has always been shown as "tragic" and "unhealthy".
     
    "People have been very cozy about lesbian relationships. I am glad my writings have been able to break that stereotype," she said.
     
    However, as a woman, writing about lesbians and their sexual chemistry has put her into an uncomfortable zone which, according to her, "puts a lot of pressure on women authors to be modest in their writings."
     
    "Even in the West, sex is seen as startling when a woman writes about it and this sexualises her. So, in my novels, there are sex scenes but not too much....but they do get noticed. It is about women not having quite the freedom," Waters concluded.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Floods cripple Jammu and Kashmir, weather office says worst ever

    Floods cripple Jammu and Kashmir, weather office says worst ever
    The worst-ever floods in Jammu and Kashmir in 60 years have left at least 107 dead, affected 2,500 villages as well as extensively damaged property...

    Floods cripple Jammu and Kashmir, weather office says worst ever

    Possible to compromise in defamation case: Kerjriwal tells court

    Possible to compromise in defamation case: Kerjriwal tells court
    Former chief minister of Delhi Arvind Kejriwal Saturday told a court here that he is planning to reach a compromise in a criminal defamation....

    Possible to compromise in defamation case: Kerjriwal tells court

    National e-library in the offing

    National e-library in the offing
    Human Resource Development Minister Smriti Irani Friday said the government would soon launch an online library to make study materials available to all.

    National e-library in the offing

    Make India a hub for exporting teachers: Modi

    Make India a hub for exporting teachers: Modi
    Prime minister Narendra Modi Friday exhorted students to remember the importance of teachers in social life and called for making India a hub for exporting teachers.

    Make India a hub for exporting teachers: Modi

    Minor's killing for stealing mango triggers tension

    Minor's killing for stealing mango triggers tension
    In a sensational case, a mango vendor battered a boy to death for stealing a fruit from his pushcart here, police said Friday. The murder triggered tension in the area.

    Minor's killing for stealing mango triggers tension

    Chandigarh asked to compensate family of electric shock victims

    Chandigarh asked to compensate family of electric shock victims
    The Punjab and Haryana High Court Friday ordered the the Chandigarh Administration's electricity department to pay compensation of Rs.22.81 lakh to the family of a man and his daughter who were electrocuted in a village of this union territory May 2003.

    Chandigarh asked to compensate family of electric shock victims