| Paper Title |
The Gender We Perform: Non-Binary Narratives in Contemporary Indian Theatre |
| Author(s) | Anirban Banik. |
| Country | India |
| Abstract |
Theatre has historically been an agency for the exploration of identity, but Indian theatre in the twenty-first century is increasingly subverting strict gender binaries, providing an exciting platform for non-binary performance. Performing Gender: Non-Binary Identities in Contemporary Indian Theatre looks at the way that contemporary performance texts unpick conventional ideas of gender and create mobile identities on stage. Though Indian myth and folk have long acknowledged gender variation via the presence of characters such as Ardhanarishvara, Shikhandi, and transgender performance culture, twenty-first-century theatre recasts those stories in updated socio-political frameworks. This paper primarily focuses on recent Indian plays that centre on non-binary identities, including Mahesh Dattani’s Seven Steps Around the Fire, which unveils the marginalisation of transgender communities, and Abhishek Majumdar’s Kaumudi, which subverts rigid gendered storytelling structures. Additionally, it analyzes Manjula Padmanabhan’s Hidden Fires, Rudradeep Chakraborty’s Beyond Binary, and other experimental works that deconstruct heteronormative frameworks. Through a critical reading of these works, the paper examines how Indian theatre functions as a space of resistance as well as a form of reimagining gender outside of the binary. Beyond text analysis, this research also investigates the changing role of non-binary performers, directors, and performance-makers who are reshaping the theatrical landscapes of India. It explores the ways in which immersive theatre, online performances, and alternative storytelling platforms expand non-binary voices, often side-stepping institutional obstacles. Yet, even as it documents these advances, the paper also questions the obstacles that face non-binary performers and stories—whether conservative society push-back, marginalization from mainstream theatre, or the commodification of queer identity on stage. By braiding play analysis, performance studies, and sociocultural critique, this essay hopes to illuminate the radical potential of theatre to remake gender fluidity discourses in contemporary India. It suggests that Indian theatre is not only responding to changing times but also playing a crucial role in breaking the gender binary, making room for inclusive and representative depictions. |
| Keywords | Non-Binary Identities, Contemporary Indian Theatre, Gender Fluidity, Resistance, Performance Studies |
| Subject Area | Performing Arts |
| Issue | Volume 3, Issue 3 (May - June 2026) |
| Published | 2026/06/23 |
| How to Cite | Banik, A. (2026). The Gender We Perform: Non-Binary Narratives in Contemporary Indian Theatre. International Journal of Social Science Research (IJSSR), 3(3), 824–829. https://doi.org/10.70558/IJSSR.2026.v3.i3.301142 |
| DOI | 10.70558/IJSSR.2026.v3.i3.301142 |
View / Download PDF File