Individuals
worldwide face inequalities, violence, social alienation, hate crimes and in
some cases death simply because of their sexual orientation, physical
appearance or who they are.
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans* (LGBT) rights are human rights. There are several societal factors that
impact the views that individual countries have about the LGBT community. In some cases, the dominant religious
beliefs impact common attitudes about the queer community. In other cases, the beliefs about the
LGBT community are rooted in traditional fundamentalist views. Russia has very split views on LGBT
rights and the views about the queer community are intertwined with political
affiliation and fundamentalist ideals.
India has continued to slowly progress toward LGBT equality and has made
progress as far as understanding sexuality and sexual fluidity. China has made great progress in terms
of queer studies being taught in educational classrooms, but LGBT rights in
terms of marriage and other access to human rights have proven to be very
difficult because of the historical view of what is considered to be Chinese
versus what is considered to be “un-Chinese.”
Russia
Russia
has recently made international news because of the disgust that many Russian
politicians have openly voiced about the LGBT community. These problematic and narrow-minded
views of the queer community have become a central aspect in politics and the
ideology that many Russian citizens share (LGBT sexuality as a sexual
perversion) (Kon 43). In 1993,
homosexuality was decriminalized in Russia (Kon 45). The efforts to “normalize” or humanize the LGBT community in
Russia have proven extremely difficult.
Despite the difficulty, European Parliament created legislation defining
homophobia a decade ago. They
define homophobia as: “an irrational fear and revulsion toward homosexuality,
lesbians, bisexuals and trans* individuals” (Kon 45). This definition was formulated with the understanding that
homophobia should be treated in a similar way as racism, xenophobia,
anti-Semitism and sexism. The way
that Russian Parliament defines sexuality: heterosexuality, homosexuality and bisexuality, does not
allow for sexual fluidity.
Although
Russia has legalized “same-sex love”, and have made it more visible and has
created opportunities for open dialogue many older individuals and politically
conservative people feel that the democratization that calls for tolerance of
different life-styles impedes on their individual freedoms (Kon 45). It should be noted that in Russia, the
use of the term “life-style” is used to describe an individual’s sexual
orientation. Ordinary homophobia
has proven hard to eliminate because it is not only being implemented at the
individual level, but homophobia has become engrained into the larger societal
practices and institutions (Kon 46).
At
present, there is a culture of fear around the LGBT community in Russia. A culture of fear involves large-scale
fear for the purpose of achieving political goals. In this case, the LGBT community is seen as a group of
individuals who violate unwritten societal rules. The fear of the LGBT community in Russia is rooted in the
irrational political agendas that people in power are trying to enforce. One specific example involves a
political leader who was quoted as stating, “gays demonize and are scapegoats
not only for their own sins but also are the cause of all of the misfortunes
and contradictions of life, from the demoralization of the armed forces to the
decline in birthrates (Kon 46).
Russia
and the United States have developed opposite political and ideological
directions in terms of sexual minorities.
Russia views the United States’ acceptance of the LGBT community and the
recent legalization of gay marriage in a number of states as “promoting
homosexuality” (Kon 46). In fact,
a recent study in Russia, in which participants were asked how homosexuals
should be treated, showed that there are definite differences in opinions among
Russians. Of the respondents 54
answered that homosexuals should receive medical/psychological treatment, 49
respondents said that homosexuals should be isolated from society and left
completely alone, 3 respondents believed that homosexuals should be physically
eliminated (Kon 49). A related
study was conducted not long after, and this study aimed to determine how many
of the participants believed that homosexual relations between consenting
adults should be prosecuted. The
results showed that 41 of the respondents stated that they believed that it
should be prosecuted and 40 respondents believed that it should not be
prosecuted (Kon 52).
India
India
has very diverse views regarding the LGBT rights. Historically, French philosopher Michel Foucault played an
instrumental role in shaping scholar’s ideas about sexuality and sexual
fluidity. Gender histories,
including those of South Asia, have been used to argue that in the nineteenth
century the relationship between sexuality, knowledge and power took on
explicit shape. During this time,
there was an escalation in the policing of human sexuality within colonized
nations. This policing of
sexuality and sexual expression helped to ensure and maintain social order
(Gupta 1). The historical records
of sexuality illustrate a dynamic relationship between the apparent division
sexual expression and everyday social reality (Gupta 1). Foucault believed that the social
convention created a discourse around sexuality, and as a result sexuality is
ever-present (Gupta 1). These
discourses have created sexual identities and an array of sexualities that
would not have existed were it not for the insights of Foucault (Gupta 4).
Although Britain criminalized
same-sex love by law in 1861, Indian reformers—both revivalists and
nationalists—were attempting to regulate the LGBT community by limiting their
rights. They rationalized their
actions by claiming that LGBT individuals and their behavior were “alien to
Indian culture” (Gupta 1).
Additionally, the political leaders at the time were trying to render
the relationship that exists between a husband and wife as ideal because of the
cultural importance of procreation and sexual pleasure (Gupta 2). The fact that a widely-held belief that
the LGBT community is not having intimate relations for the purposes of
reproduction means that members of that community are directly disobeying the
unwritten societal rules that surround same-sex relations.
Contemporary
LGBT activists have questioned and challenged the current socially constructed
norms and taboos that thrive in Indian culture. Scholars argue that colonialism and modernity led to the
increasing opinion that sexuality among members of the LGBT community and
particularly queer women are insignificant and thus, people who have political
power have continued to ignore calls for reform of LGBT rights. In the past, LGBT individuals have been
alienated and homosexual relations have been referred to as “sexual
obscenities” (Gupta 4). The widely
held beliefs about the importance of masculinity and patriarchal societal
institutions have exacerbated the societal isolation of the LGBT community in
India. Gayness has been viewed as
a threat to the masculine cultural ideals, which have been upheld for several
generations (Gupta 4).
China
China
has made enormous progress in the past fifty years regarding LGBT rights. In fact, universities throughout China
stress the importance of queer studies.
One of the most notable advances in terms of LGBT rights in the past
decade was the release and mass publishing of queer novels. The first queer novel ever published in
China featured a homosexual male character (Liu 301). The story revolved around this man’s personal journey of
self-discovery. Even though China
has made progress, the concept of “paper marriage” has become very
problematic. Paper marriage
involves several legal documents that need to be obtained and presented to the
Chinese government before the couple can be legally married. This has created obstacles for members
of the LGBT community who lack access to the legal resources and necessary legal
documentation of their right to marry (Liu 300). Several written works in China have been written about the
complex nature of paper marriage and the problematic nature of homophobia,
fundamentalist perspectives in terms of the LGBT community and the societal
standard of what is considered to be Chinese versus what is considered to be
“un-Chinese” (Liu 306). One of the
essential documents that are required for “paper marriage” is a document that
an individual’s family submits to the government stating that they are
marriageable and that the family approves of the match. Often times, families have conflicting
beliefs about the acceptability of LGBT marriage rights. Without the legal documentation
submitted by the family, the couple cannot legally be married (Liu 304).
The
insights of Foucault were essential in shaping the ideas that the Chinese culture
values in terms of sexual identity.
However, Foucault’s insights become problematic when one considers that
his viewpoints do not always acknowledge the fact that the construction of
homosexuality as an embodied identity requires, first and foremost, the
construction of a location (Liu 304).
In Chen’s work, the modern construction of “the homosexual” is created
through sexual experimentation during adolescence and self-discovery (Liu
300). Through Chen’s
representation of homosexuality, China and America have come to dialectically
define each other’s conceptual borders (Liu 301). The historical development of queer theory indicates that an
empiricist description of alternative sexualities and heterosexist assumptions
are no longer satisfactory, and queer theory is constantly evolving, changing
and searching for intellectual tools to develop more current and accurate
assertions about sexuality (Liu 301).
Fundamentalist
viewpoints are prevalent in each of these countries. The views and ideas that people have about the LGBT
community become muddled up in fundamentalist ideas about gender and sexuality. The key ensuring equality for LGBT
people is altering the widely-held beliefs about traditional marriage,
sexuality, procreation and sexual identity.
References
Gupta, Charu. 2011. Writing Sex and
Sexuality: Archives of Colonial North India.
Baltimore, MD: The Johns
Hopkins University Press.
De Kloet, Jeroen. 2008. Gendering China
Studies: Peripheral Perspectives, Central
Questions.
Leiden, China: Leiden University Press.
Kon, Ian. 2009. Homophobia as a Litmus Test
of Russian Democracy. New York, NY:
M.E. Sharpe, Inc.
Liu, Petrus. 2010. Why Does Queer Theory
Need China? Durham, NC: Duke
University Press.
Misra, Geetanjali. 2009. Decriminalizing
Homosexuality in India. New Delhi, India:
Reproductive Health Matters
Press.
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