IntersectionalityLGBTQIA+ Chennai Organised A Queer LitFest For Writers and Artists In The Margins

Chennai Organised A Queer LitFest For Writers and Artists In The Margins

The Queer LitFest was conceived to create a conversation about queer Indian literature, queerness in India and to bring together political and literary values of the works that play an important role in the lives of queer people.

Posted by Moulee

QCC Queer LitFest Chennai 2018 was organised by Queer Chennai Chronicles (QCC) and held on July 7 at Kavikko Convention Centre, Chennai. The LitFest was conceived to create a conversation about queer Indian literature, queerness in India and to bring together political and literary values of the works that play an important role in the lives of queer people.

The LitFest was organised completely by crowd-funding from the community members and allies. The one day event brought together varied queer perspectives about literature from, and about India and hosted a series of sessions that was in the form of panel discussions, oration, poetry and reading performances. People from Chennai and nearby cities attended the LitFest and it received encouraging responses from participants and audience alike.

Living Smile Vidya, an Indian theatre artist, assistant director, writer and trans rights activist from Chennai gave her keynote to be read at the festival followed by engaging sessions on: media representation and narratives of LGBTQ individuals, queer literature in publishing, literature that shapes queer identities in India and some lightning talks. The list of speakers and panelists of these sessions can be found here.

Vasudhendra of Mohanaswamy fame spoke about queer literature in Kannada followed by reading from selected queer literature in Tamil. A chapter by Sheiji Tadakoro from the upcoming Queer Chennai Anthology was also read in the session. Along the lines of diversity and marginality of queer lives and their invisibilised narratives, The Chinky Homo Project (Digital and print queer anthology of North East India) was formally launched in the LitFest. The video playlist and the audio podcast of the festival were published early this month.

The LitFest overall worked towards encouraging and creating opportunities for queer writers, translators and artists who are otherwise invisibilised or ignored in various literary platforms; and a deeper appreciation for queer literature. QCC envisions to keep the LitFest every year with support from the community.

Also read: 5 South Asian Writers Who Expanded The Boundaries Of Queer Literature


Moulee works in the Tech industry and is a blogger and focuses on intersectional issues within the queer community and workplace diversity. 

This article was previously published on Gaylaxy Magazine and has been re-published with consent.

Featured Image Source: Medium

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