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Gay-lesbian course at UoP sets an example for other universities

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    Prof Raj Rao with Richa Singh & Kailas Kalapahad.
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    When the University of Pune (UoP) started a Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender (LGBT) course in 2007, it was the second university in the country, after University of Hyderabad, to do so. Then, the UoP initially even had to put a disclaimer saying that one doesn’t have to be gay to take the course.

    Today even as two of its students take up LGBT topics for MPhil research, other universities are mulling over the possibility of getting the Department of English, that conducts the LGBT course, to hold a workshop on it for their teachers, reflecting a significant change in the academia’s mindset.

    “The other day, two professors from outside Pune — PC Kar from the University of Baroda and CJ Jahagirdhar from Kolhapur University — visited us and were of the opinion that we should conduct workshop for college-level lecturers on the LGBT course on their campuses. It shows a welcome change in the attitude of the academic fraternity,” said Raj Rao, professor of English at the UoP, whose persistence resulted in the LGBT course seeing the light of the day.

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    Rao is now hopeful that the scrapping of Section 377 will help further in extending the course, which has been taken up only by the Jawaharlal Nehru University after Hyderabad and Pune, to other universities in the country.

    “It’s strange how the academic fraternity that has always been quick to accept all kinds of literature — Marxist, feminist, Dalit — had a huge reservation when it came to queer literature. For years, the Board of Studies refused to let us start the course saying that ‘Indian students do not need it’. Finally we clubbed it with Dalit literature and started it under the genre of Alternative Literature,” Rao says.

    ... contd.

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    ParmaBy: Indira n maya | 03-Aug-2009 Reply | Forward Great news simply because the inclusion will open on to transformations at structural levels... congrats to these efforts. I look forward to getting more news. the other disturbing bit is that of all the places in gujarat Baroda is one city that has active queer groups for both genders. Lakshaya and Parma. The latter in many ways first in the country that works with the rural tribal woman in same sex relationships .... lots of luck for bringing chnage it is hard road, Vikalp( Women's group) Parma the group for the sexually marginalized with a capital T
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