2022
DOI: 10.33391/jgjh.122
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Getting by with my <i>Yaars</i>: Analyzing Decoloniality and the University through <i>Yaariyan</i>, <i>Gupshup</i> and <i>Baithak</i>

Abstract: This position paper engages with the possible intersection of decoloniality and the gender studies classroom. This paper is a reflection on the experience of an international, queer, South Asian student in the Netherlands, thinking through the theme of decolonizing at the University and in Gender Studies classrooms. This paper illustrates a personal stance on the questions of: What steps do I take, as a student, to engage with gender studies and the larger space of the university through the lens of decolonial… Show more

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“…Ahmad reminds us, baithak in popular Urdu refers to a collective sitting or seating arrangement on the floor that creates more decolonial spatial formations. We make room, as it were (Ahmad, 2022). When evoked as Bethak , it involves a literal squat, a muscular fold that invites bodily surrender.…”
Section: Come Away With Me: Baithakmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ahmad reminds us, baithak in popular Urdu refers to a collective sitting or seating arrangement on the floor that creates more decolonial spatial formations. We make room, as it were (Ahmad, 2022). When evoked as Bethak , it involves a literal squat, a muscular fold that invites bodily surrender.…”
Section: Come Away With Me: Baithakmentioning
confidence: 99%