While it is incredibly difficult to make generalisations about LGBTIQ
advocacy efforts or debates over gay rights across Asia, many commentators have
expressed optimism after a number of public expressions or political
initiatives in support of gay unions and rights.
Most have hailed these
events as important milestones for the affirmation of sexual freedoms, from gay
couples publicly ‘tying the knot’ in Myanmar, to pride parades such as Pink Dot SG
in Singapore, and government-appointed same-sex marriage committees
in Nepal. Thailand, Vietnam and Taiwan, too, are reconsidering existing prohibitions on same-sex marriages.
These show that both Asian citizens and political regimes alike have become
thoroughly literate in the vocabulary of LGBTIQ advocacy (which covers the
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, and queer communities).
But not everyone agrees on
the extent of social acceptance for gay rights, unions or marriages. Across
Asia, governments are sensitive to impassioned debates over same-sex marriage
legislation in the West. They are recognising that they can no longer ignore
nor explicitly denounce this new wave of sexual self-determination, introduced
through the forces of cultural globalisation and via increasingly cosmopolitan
segments of their citizenry.
Yet — both citing and siding
with anti-LGBTIQ conservatives — these very same regimes have also been quick
to dampen speculation about the possibility of legalising gay marriage. In some
cases, they continue to maintain draconian laws that criminalise same-sex
behaviour, all in the name of protecting traditional public interests or
values.
Many LGBTIQ activists boldly
claim that social conservatism towards these issues is rapidly dissolving. They
point to the growing public acceptance and support for their cause in the form
of state-tolerated campaigns, online and live advocacy efforts and a general
climate of political and sexual liberalisation.
But these liberal gestures —
touted as a sign of changing times and the rise of a new Asia, one free from
all kinds of bigotry and cultural discrimination — might not turn out to be the
utopia its proponents had hoped for. If ‘everyone’s a little bit racist’, as
the Broadway musical, Avenue
Q, declares, then perhaps, one should not exclude the possibility
that ‘everyone’s a little bit homophobic’ too. Indeed, could the vogue for
liberal attitudes towards gay rights be sidestepping — or worse, obscuring — an
underlying climate of traditionalism and sexual conservatism?
It is important to be
cautious when celebrating the growing presence of grassroots social activism,
non-governmental organisations and human rights watch-groups across Asia
concerned with sexual rights and diversity. These organisations claim the right
to advocate and speak for the gay person, but their liberal agenda does little to
overturn traditional mindsets rooted in histories of religious belief, family
values and kinship ties.
Many LGBTIQ-identifying
individuals can little afford the costs of estrangement or isolation from
intimate others, regardless of whether public discourses exhort them for
bravery or endow them with the rights of sexual self-determination. More
troubling is the tendency for the queer community to be portrayed as a deeply
oppressed underclass. As such, they get conflated with other groups pressing
for political liberalisation and social recognition, thus effectively diluting
their specific sexual demands and struggles.
Most of all, it should be
acknowledged that the struggle for gay rights and the legalisation of gay
marriages continues to feed heterosexual liberal fantasies, instead of
challenging the status quo.
Public campaigns, articles and speeches beseeching sexual rights remain
entrenched in the language of victimhood, struggle and triumphant overcoming
when discussing LGBTIQ communities.
These melodramatic plots,
evident in stories of forbidden love and the struggle for emancipated desire
among queer individuals and couples, make sense when read against other equally
important social currents in Asian societies today. The institution
of marriage is paling in significance, and family oriented-ness is declining
among younger generations. Given the conscious decisions of
heterosexual individuals to remain single or marry later in life due to
economic imperatives, Asian societies are fraught with collective anxieties
over familial continuity and reproduction.
In other words, gay
struggles for recognition and legitimacy serve the indirect purpose of reviving
the intrinsic value of intimate partnership. They operate as exemplary models
for heterosexual couples to learn from and emulate. Tales of queer couples’
valiantly fought battles to love and be loved in the face of adversity
constitute a powerful — but mostly unconscious and unacknowledged —mechanism
that prompts other citizens to revalue romantic couplehood and marriage.
Unfortunately, in the public
circulation of these dramatised stories and romantic clichés, LGBTIQ narratives
have become decontextualised, instead supporting a generic ‘freedom
to love’ without a referent. This kind of advocacy neither
challenges heterosexual ideals as the dominant social paradigm, nor addresses
the unequivocally unique sexual orientations of LGBTIQ persons.
Queer advocacy in a liberal
mode might be subordinated to other heterosexual or political agendas to the
point of its unrecognisability or even disintegration. It is essential that
LGBTIQ movements in Asia reclaim their own particularity and assert the
validity of their cultural and sexual demands uncompromisingly. Instead of
pandering to heterosexual publics in an effort to be included as a part of blanket
liberalism, queer activists should emphasise their difference from and
irreconcilability with existing traditions and conservatisms. Only by doing so
can they champion the distinctive value of gay.
Sherman Tan is a PhD
candidate in anthropology in the College of Asia and the Pacific at the
Australian National University.
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