Abstract
This article analyzes the frictions the rainbow flag creates between transnational, national and translocal discourses and materialities. It focuses on the ambivalent role that the transnational ‘rainbow’ space plays for community building for LGBTQ activists in in Pakistan. The rainbow flag can function as a way to mobilize an imagined transnational community of belonging, enabling people to politicize their experiences of discrimination as a demand of recognition directed at the state. But it can also enable homonationalism and transnational middle class formations that exclude groups of people, for example illiterates and people perceived of as traditional, such as Khwaja Siras. The article is based on auto-ethnographic reflections on encounters with activists in Pakistan, and critically discusses the problem of feeling ‘too comfortable’, as white, Western, middle-class researchers, exploring ‘imperial narratives’ dominating the feminist and LGBTQ activist transnational imagined community of belonging. It argues for the importance of recognizing the transnational space as a space in its own right, with different positions, communities and conflicts stretching around the globe.
Highlights
In the autumn of 2016, during the writing of this article,1 progressive struggles to challenge and change norms on gender and sexuality were articulated and documented worldwide
We argue that the rainbow flag, as a cultural product, has generated the idea that a substantial amount of people that do not conform to normative ideals about gender and sexuality, around the globe, experience similar exposure to discrimination and violence, and that they can be united, i.e. the idea that a transnational community can emerge
Though our focus is on the rainbow flag and its conflictual role in transnational politics we are interested in formations of class and inequality in the communities we study, and in understanding class as a transnational community
Summary
Empfohlene Zitierung / Suggested Citation: Alm, Erika; Martinsson, Lena: The rainbow flag as friction : transnational imagined communities of belonging among Pakistani LGBTQ activists, in: Culture unbound : Journal of current cultural research, Jg. 8 (2017) Nr. 3, 218-239. The Rainbow Flag as Friction: Transnational, Imagined Communities of Belonging among Pakistani LGBTQ Activists
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