top of page
Frames of Reference
with Vaishnavi Manju Pal


Where Memory Refuses to Die: Language, Denial, and the Ghosts of Gujarat
What does it mean to move on from violence when memory itself is a site of conflict? In Gujarat, the legacy of the 2002 pogrom has been carefully, even violently, curated into the official memory of the state, one that erases as much as it remembers. What remains is not reconciliation, but a selective memorisation that excludes the lived trauma of the Muslim community.


Dalit-Queer And Necropolitics: Simultaneous Co-Option And Marginalisation of the Dalit-Queer Community
With standardisation comes homogeneity, and homogeneity creates anomalies who do not fit into the mould and therefore need to be discarded on the margins. These beings on the margins, who do not fit sanitised and legally-enforced definitions created by states and adopted by nations, are at the centre of the discussion. Dalit-Queer folx (people who are both Dalit and Queer) inhabit the "death worlds" that Achille Mbembe discusses in his theorisation of Necropolitics.


The Inverted Feminist Politics of Hindu Nationalist Feminists
The global rise of right-wing gender discourse and advocacy is a testament to the fact that there is no monolithic gender system that exists in any given society.
bottom of page