Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1235Hits:19420833Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID191704
Title ProperConsider the Aunty
Other Title Informationthe Obfuscation of Desire in My Beautiful Laundrette
LanguageENG
AuthorZaman, Amal
Summary / Abstract (Note)This essay reads the aunties on the peripheries of Hanif Kureishi and Stephen Frear’s film, My Beautiful Laundrette (1985), as minor figures, enacting a methodological turn to the seemingly insignificant in analyses of South Asian culture and sexuality. I ask why the aunties’ desire feels so impossible, especially in a film centred on a Pakistani protagonist’s queer utopia. Both ubiquitous and precluded from a complexity of desire, representations of the Pakistani aunty suffer from a deficit of imagination. Aunties tend to be shown as middle-aged women who surveil and police their kin and have a neutered or absent sexuality, as the film’s paradigmatic figuration of the aunty exemplifies. This article argues that such creative constraint derives from the construction of female sexuality as deviance in South Asia, and then tries to look beyond these constraints. While asking what a more capacious imagining of the aunty and her desires might make possible, I offer parameters for reading sexuality in Pakistan and its diasporas by foregrounding deprivation of pleasure and choice.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 46, No.1; Feb 2023: p.95-112
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol: 46 No 1
Key WordsRepresentation ;  Queer Studies ;  Aunty ;  Deviant Sexuality ;  Ffemale Sexuality ;  Queer Futurity ;  South Asian Sexuality


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text