Becoming Incomplete: The Transgender Body and National Modernity in New Order Indonesia (1967-1998)
Date
2017
Authors
Hegarty, Benjamin
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Abstract
Becoming Incomplete: The Transgender Body and
National Modernity in New Order Indonesia (1967-1998)
Abstract: This PhD thesis describes the ways that the gendered
body is experienced across the life course and within its
historical context. It does so by describing, in dialogue with
ethnographic and historical data, transformations in
understandings and experiences of male-bodied femininity during
New Order Indonesia (1967-1998). The main focus of this thesis
are waria, and the closely related but separate term banci. Both
waria and banci are Indonesian terms which refer to diverse forms
of gendered embodiment and social practices. Waria practice a
broad range of femininities depending on their audience, and
challenge the universality of Western categories of gender and
sexual diversity. Notably, both terms - but especially banci -
have negative connotations of deviance through a relationship to
transactional sex, public sexuality and flamboyant femininity.
Given that embodiment and selfhood are understood by waria to be
shaped by those with whom one interacts, a primary concern of
this thesis is kin and social relations among waria. My chief
finding is that waria of this generation see their gender
presentation as a product of relationships of intimacy and
dependency. Waria describe these understandings of intimacy and
forms of self-making as a process they call "becoming (waria
jadi)." Waria narrate their own subjectivity and that of other
waria in terms of beginning as "banci kaléng (empty banci)"
before becoming more visible over time. I highlight how waria's
gender performances are performed with specific audiences in
mind, paying attention to various audiences and their
relationship to the gender performance in question. This suggests
that, while there is no stable embodiment to which waria ascribe,
their gender performances are shaped by highly specific aesthetic
and social scripts within their historical and cultural context.
The thesis is based on long-term fieldwork conducted in 2014 and
2015 in the Indonesian cities of Yogyakarta and Jakarta. As such,
this thesis offers an ethnographic account of everyday life among
mostly elderly, lower class waria in the context of their social
worlds. I also provide historical contextualisation of the
globalisation of Western discourse, both through expert knowledge
and the mass media. I do so to describe how this discourse
interacts with regional understandings of personhood to produce
specific forms of intelligible gendered embodiment in Indonesia.
The thesis builds on a growing literature in transgender studies
alongside feminist anthropology to develop theoretical
innovations in how the body is implicated in projects of
capitalist modernity, emphasising the voices of waria themselves
in that process. The major theoretical contribution of the thesis
is a detailed description of waria's understanding of gender,
which calls into question the naturalisation of masculinity or
femininity as enduring and stable aspects of an individual body
which emanate from an inner self.
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Indonesia, transgender, sexuality, gender, New Order, femininity, ethnography, history, modernity
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Thesis (PhD)
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