e-ISSN 2231-8534
ISSN 0128-7702
Nur Ain Nasuha Binti Anuar and Moussa Pourya Asl
Pertanika Journal of Social Science and Humanities, Volume 29, Issue 4, December 2021
DOI: https://doi.org/10.47836/pjssh.29.4.13
Keywords: Écriture féminine, hijra, identity formation, inherent bisexuality, resistance
Published on: 13 December 2021
Hijra is a distinctive South Asia known for their gender and sexual difference and associated with their transgender and intersex identities. Otherwise known as transwomen, they are traditionally subjected to prejudices and embedded within narratives of exclusion, discrimination, and the subculture. As a result, Hijras are typically perceived as isolated, abject, and passive victims who remain social and economic peripheries. Concerning the stereotypical image of hijras, this study explores Arundhati Roy’s The Ministry of Utmost Happinessecriture féminine, this study examines characters’ contestations and alterations of existing definitions of sex and gender. This framework allows for a manifestation of gender flexibility and feminine writing as a tool for self-emancipation. Both protagonists Anjum and Tilo, illustrate that hijras are not predetermined but are formulated in a complex process of a conscious rewriting of the self. While the former character resists heteropatriarchal normativity through her conscious alterations of the phallogocentric structure of her Urdu language, the latter defies societal conventions of family and marriage with unorthodox views and actions that are materialized in the writing of her story.
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ISSN 0128-7702
e-ISSN 2231-8534
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