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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:South Asia Center co-sponsored by Department of AnthropologyPre
 sents: Lucinda Ramberg Assistant Professor\, Department of Anthropology\, 
 Cornell University Clinical Encounters and Citizenship Projects in South I
 ndia Dedicated to a South Indian goddess\, devadasis are priests in a heal
 ing cult whose non-monogamous sexuality has been designated as prostitutio
 n and subjected to eradication by the state. This paper considers them in 
 two ways they cross the threshold of the clinic\, as “vectors of disease” 
 and as sex worker peer educators\, in order to think about the biopolitica
 l character of citizenship in postcolonial India.
DTEND:20120913T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260420T191144Z
DTSTART:20120913T200000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:South Asia Center Presents: Lucinda Ramberg
UID:RFCALITEM639122947040333056
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:South Asia Center co-sponsored by Department o
 f AnthropologyPresents: Lucinda Ramberg Assistant Professor\, Department o
 f Anthropology\, Cornell University Clinical Encounters and Citizenship Pr
 ojects in South India Dedicated to a South Indian goddess\, devadasis are 
 priests in a healing cult whose non-monogamous sexuality has been designat
 ed as prostitution and subjected to eradication by the state. This paper c
 onsiders them in two ways they cross the threshold of the clinic\, as “vec
 tors of disease” and as sex worker peer educators\, in order to think abou
 t the biopolitical character of citizenship in postcolonial India.
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