When Revathi’s powerful memoir, The Truth About Me, first appeared in 2011, it caused a sensation. Readers learned of Revathi’s childhood unease with her male body; her escape from her birth family to a house of hijras (the South Asian generic term for transgender people) and her eventual transition to being the woman she always she knew was. This new book charts her remarkable journey from relative obscurity to becoming India’s leading spokesperson for transgender rights and an inspiration to thousands.
Revathi describes her life, her work in the NGO Sangama, which works with people across a spectrum of gender identities and sexual orientations and how she rose from office assistant to director in the organization. Today she is an independent activist, theatre person, actor and writer and works for the rights of transgender persons.
In the second part of the book, Revathi offers the reader an insight into one of the least talked about experiences on the gender trajectory, that of being trans men. Calling several female-to-male trans persons her ‘sons’, Revathi puts before us their moving, passionate and sometimes tragic stories of marginalization, courage, resistance and triumph.
An unforgettable book, A Life in Transactivism will leave the reader questioning the ‘safe’ and ‘comfortable’ binaries of male/female that so many of us take for granted.
About the Author
A. Revathi is a writer, actor and activist based in Bangalore. She has been the director of Sangama, a sexuality minorities human rights organization for individuals oppressed due to their sexual preference.
Nandini Murali is one of the Trustees of Srishti Madurai, the first LGBTQIA and Genderqueer Student Volunteer Educational Research Foundation in India.