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Similarly, Mohan, in his discussion of recent political moves by the hijras of Uttar Pradesh, claims that ‘no one would mistake [the hijras] for women’ sińce ‘their faces, their limbs, and their voices have a masculine roughness’ (1979: i). And Sharma, in support of his declaration that the hijras, of all those who defy linguistic cat-egorization, are ‘the most interesting and outlandish freaks of naturę* (1984: 381), focuses on the community’s ‘ambivalent phys-ical appearance*. Opening his article with the observation that ‘certainly every society gives linguistic notice of the differential parts individuals are expected to play’, he notes a marked excep-tion in the case of ‘individuals who do not belong to either sex* (p. 381). In Sharma*s opinion, the fact that the hijras ‘shave, smoke, and talk like men but dress and behave in a morę feminine way in the society at large’ (p. 381) points to their ambiguous status not only in the social structure, but in the linguistic gender system as wełl.

What is significant about Sethi’s narrative, however, is that even though the author is critical of Kumari*s masculine-sounding voice, he reports her speech entirely in the first-person feminine. After asking Kumari to let her hair down for a photograph, he ąuotes her as saying in Hindi, ‘Acchaji, khol deti hurt!9 - a response which translates into English as, ‘Okay sir, 1*11 untie it.* But by employing the feminine-marked khol deti f hu instead of the masculine khol detam hu,8 Kumari identifies herself linguistically within the pas-sage as female. Perhaps noticing similar employments of feminine self-reference among hijras in other communities, a number of scholars working with speakers of gendered Indo-Aryan languages have remarked that the hijras ‘affect female speech and manners’ (e.g. Patel 1983: 121) and ‘become adept in feminine speech pat-terns and gait’ (e.g. Mukherjee 1980: 61). The precise meaning of such statements is unclear, yet one thing is certain: the authors remain unconvinced of the hijra’s ability to achieve fluency in such patterns. Jani and Rosenberg, displeased with the performances of the Hindi-speakers they interviewed in western India, comment on the hijras’ ‘largely exaggerated female mannerisms and gesturing* (1990: 103), and Patel, in his work among the hijras in Gujarat, argues that ‘in spite of their efforts to look and act like females, their behavior is neither completely masculine nor feminine*

(1983: 121).

Such criticism underscores a larger societal refusal to accept the hiiras’ femininity as genuine, and an accompanying disapproval of



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