A. Revathi: Difference between revisions
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== Personal life == |
== Personal life == |
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Revathi was born as Doraisamy in the district of Namakkal in the Indian state of [[Tamil Nadu]], and was assigned a male gender based on physiology. As a child, Revathi experienced violence in her school and within her family for her 'feminine' ways. She preferred playing with young girls over boys and dressed up as a woman in her mother's clothes, distressed by the feeling of being a female trapped in a male body. Her personal and social hardships affected her academic performance, and she had to drop out of school as a result, having failed the tenth grade.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://eprints.manipal.edu/139765/1/WIC-Prabhu.pdf|title=Writing a Life Between Gender Lines: Conversations with A.Revathi about Her Autobiography "The Truth About Me: A Hijra Life Story" |last=Prabhu |first=Gayatri |date=2014}}</ref> However, when she first met a group of people from the [[Kothi (gender)|kothi]] community during a school trip to Nammakal, she felt a sense of kinship and decided to run away to Delhi with them so that she could be true to her gender identity.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://jaiarjun.blogspot.in/2011/10/on-revathis-truth-about-me-hijra-life.html|title=Jabberwock: A. Revathi's A Hijra Life Story - a long journey to self-acceptance|date=13 October 2011}}</ref> In Delhi, she met a group of people belonging to the Hijra community and began living with them.<ref>{{cite book|title=Truth about Me: A Hijra Life Story|first1=A.|last1=Revathi|first2=V.|last2=Geetha|date=1 August 2010|publisher=Penguin Books|isbn = 978-0143068365}}</ref> She later underwent a [[Sex reassignment surgery|sex-change operation]], which was considered a rite of passage to get formally initiated into the hijra household. Post her operation, she was rechristened as Revathi by the guru or head of the household. Though she could finally be true to her gender identity, Revathi discovered the harsh realities of life as a hijra, where social exclusion, violence and sexual assault were all too common. She had to resort to several odd jobs to survive including dancing at weddings, begging and sex work. After some months, tired of her life in Delhi, she ran away and went back home, where she discovered she was not welcome.<ref name=":1">Kannabiran, K. (2015). The complexities of the genderscape in India, 5.</ref> She subsequently left her home in Tamil Nadu and moved to [[Bangalore|Bengaluru]] for work. While she initially took to sex work, she finally got a job at [[Sangama (human rights group)|Sangama]], an NGO working for the rights of sexual minorities. Here, she was exposed to activist meetings and learnt more about her rights. While she started off as a peon in the organisation, she rose in the ranks and finally ended up as the director.<ref name="countercurrents.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.countercurrents.org/sikand080810.htm|title=The Truth About Me—A Hijra Life Story Book Review By Yoginder Sikand}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dnaindia.com/lifestyle/report-we-want-to-live-as-women-and-we-want-our-dignity-a-revathi-1418572|title=We want to live as women, and we want our dignity: A Revathi - Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis|date=4 August 2010}}</ref> Two sources<ref name=":1" /><ref name=":0" /> mention a brief marriage with a coworker at Sangama. She works now as a transgender-rights activist based in Bengaluru.<ref>{{Cite journal |author=Govindan, P. |author2=Vasudevan, A. |date=2008|title=The Razor's Edge of Oppositionality: Exploring the Politics of Rights-Based Activism by Transgender Women in Tamil Nadu|url=http://www.lassnet.org/2009/readings/govindan-vasudevan2008razors-edge.pdf|pages=20}}</ref> |
Revathi was born as Doraisamy in the district of Namakkal in the Indian state of [[Tamil Nadu]], and was assigned a male gender based on physiology. As a child, Revathi experienced violence in her school and within her family for her 'feminine' ways. She preferred playing with young girls over boys and dressed up as a woman in her mother's clothes, distressed by the feeling of being a female trapped in a male body. Her personal and social hardships affected her academic performance, and she had to drop out of school as a result, having failed the tenth grade.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://eprints.manipal.edu/139765/1/WIC-Prabhu.pdf|title=Writing a Life Between Gender Lines: Conversations with A.Revathi about Her Autobiography "The Truth About Me: A Hijra Life Story" |last=Prabhu |first=Gayatri |date=2014}}</ref> However, when she first met a group of people from the [[Kothi (gender)|kothi]] community during a school trip to Nammakal, she felt a sense of kinship and decided to run away to Delhi with them so that she could be true to her gender identity.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://jaiarjun.blogspot.in/2011/10/on-revathis-truth-about-me-hijra-life.html|title=Jabberwock: A. Revathi's A Hijra Life Story - a long journey to self-acceptance|date=13 October 2011}}</ref> In Delhi, she met a group of people belonging to the Hijra community and began living with them.<ref>{{cite book|title=Truth about Me: A Hijra Life Story|first1=A.|last1=Revathi|first2=V.|last2=Geetha|date=1 August 2010|publisher=Penguin Books|isbn = 978-0143068365}}</ref> She later underwent a [[Sex reassignment surgery|sex-change operation]], which was considered a rite of passage to get formally initiated into the hijra household. Post her operation, she was rechristened as Revathi by the guru or head of the household. Though she could finally be true to her gender identity, Revathi discovered the harsh realities of life as a hijra, where social exclusion, violence and sexual assault were all too common. She had to resort to several odd jobs to survive including dancing at weddings, begging and sex work. After some months, tired of her life in Delhi, she ran away and went back home, where she discovered she was not welcome.<ref name=":1">Kannabiran, K. (2015). The complexities of the genderscape in India, 5.</ref> She subsequently left her home in Tamil Nadu and moved to [[Bangalore|Bengaluru]] for work. While she initially took to sex work, she finally got a job at [[Sangama (human rights group)|Sangama]], an NGO working for the rights of sexual minorities. Here, she was exposed to activist meetings and learnt more about her rights. While she started off as a peon in the organisation, she rose in the ranks and finally ended up as the director.<ref name="countercurrents.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.countercurrents.org/sikand080810.htm|title=The Truth About Me—A Hijra Life Story Book Review By Yoginder Sikand}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dnaindia.com/lifestyle/report-we-want-to-live-as-women-and-we-want-our-dignity-a-revathi-1418572|title=We want to live as women, and we want our dignity: A Revathi - Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis|date=4 August 2010}}</ref> Two sources<ref name=":1" /><ref name=":0" /> mention a brief marriage with a coworker at Sangama. She works now as a transgender-rights activist based in Bengaluru.<ref>{{Cite journal |author=Govindan, P. |author2=Vasudevan, A. |date=2008|title=The Razor's Edge of Oppositionality: Exploring the Politics of Rights-Based Activism by Transgender Women in Tamil Nadu |url=http://www.lassnet.org/2009/readings/govindan-vasudevan2008razors-edge.pdf|pages=20}}</ref> |
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== Her literary work and other achievements == |
== Her literary work and other achievements == |
Revision as of 01:58, 24 February 2021
A Revathi is a Bengaluru-based writer and an activist working for the rights of sexual minorities. She is also a trans woman and belongs to the Hijra community.
Personal life
Revathi was born as Doraisamy in the district of Namakkal in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, and was assigned a male gender based on physiology. As a child, Revathi experienced violence in her school and within her family for her 'feminine' ways. She preferred playing with young girls over boys and dressed up as a woman in her mother's clothes, distressed by the feeling of being a female trapped in a male body. Her personal and social hardships affected her academic performance, and she had to drop out of school as a result, having failed the tenth grade.[1] However, when she first met a group of people from the kothi community during a school trip to Nammakal, she felt a sense of kinship and decided to run away to Delhi with them so that she could be true to her gender identity.[2] In Delhi, she met a group of people belonging to the Hijra community and began living with them.[3] She later underwent a sex-change operation, which was considered a rite of passage to get formally initiated into the hijra household. Post her operation, she was rechristened as Revathi by the guru or head of the household. Though she could finally be true to her gender identity, Revathi discovered the harsh realities of life as a hijra, where social exclusion, violence and sexual assault were all too common. She had to resort to several odd jobs to survive including dancing at weddings, begging and sex work. After some months, tired of her life in Delhi, she ran away and went back home, where she discovered she was not welcome.[4] She subsequently left her home in Tamil Nadu and moved to Bengaluru for work. While she initially took to sex work, she finally got a job at Sangama, an NGO working for the rights of sexual minorities. Here, she was exposed to activist meetings and learnt more about her rights. While she started off as a peon in the organisation, she rose in the ranks and finally ended up as the director.[5][6] Two sources[4][1] mention a brief marriage with a coworker at Sangama. She works now as a transgender-rights activist based in Bengaluru.[7]
Her literary work and other achievements
Revathi published her first book in Tamil, Unarvum Uruvamum (Our Lives, Our Words), in 2004. It is a collection of real life stories of the people belonging to the Hijra community in South India.[8] She credits the book with inspiring other hijra writers to publish their own books, such as Priya Babu's Naan Sarvanan Alla (2007) and Vidya's I am Vidya (2008).[8]
Following this, she decided to write about her own experiences. She published her second book, The Truth about Me: A Hijra Life Story, in 2010.[9] The book was written in Tamil and translated into English by feminist historian V Geetha. According to Revathi, she initially released the book in English and not Tamil to avoid conflict with her family, who featured in her book and did not speak English. The book was eventually published in Tamil as Vellai Mozhi in 2011.[1] She cites a very prominent Tamil Dalit writer Bama as one of her main inspirations.[10]
The American College in Madurai has included The Truth about me: A Hijra Life story as a part of its third gender literature syllabus.[11]
Film career
Revathi also made history in 2008 by making her acting debut in a Tamil film Thenavattu which had two transgender lead actors.[12]
References
- ^ a b c Prabhu, Gayatri (2014). "Writing a Life Between Gender Lines: Conversations with A.Revathi about Her Autobiography "The Truth About Me: A Hijra Life Story"" (PDF).
- ^ "Jabberwock: A. Revathi's A Hijra Life Story - a long journey to self-acceptance". 13 October 2011.
- ^ Revathi, A.; Geetha, V. (1 August 2010). Truth about Me: A Hijra Life Story. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0143068365.
- ^ a b Kannabiran, K. (2015). The complexities of the genderscape in India, 5.
- ^ "The Truth About Me—A Hijra Life Story Book Review By Yoginder Sikand".
- ^ "We want to live as women, and we want our dignity: A Revathi - Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis". 4 August 2010.
- ^ Govindan, P.; Vasudevan, A. (2008). "The Razor's Edge of Oppositionality: Exploring the Politics of Rights-Based Activism by Transgender Women in Tamil Nadu" (PDF): 20.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ a b Mayanth, Nithin (4 September 2010). "Voice for visibility". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
- ^ "The life of a hijra and a tale well told".
- ^ Mayanth, Nithin (4 September 2010). "Voice for visibility". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
- ^ Shrikumar, A. (23 October 2014). "Making gender flexible". The Hindu.
- ^ Two trans-genders to play lead roles in Tamil films, 19 May 2008, Filmibeat.com, Retrieved 12 June 2016