Sheltered: a thesis exploring the link between bhodrota and the sexual subjectivities of Bangladeshi middle-class new adults
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Date
2022-08Publisher
Brac UniversityAuthor
Lateef, Zahra MayeeshaMetadata
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Sheltered’ explores the cultural taboo about sexuality among the urban middle-class in
Bangladesh, i.e. the bhodrolok, and the way it shapes sexuality and sexual norms/expectations.
This taboo exists to maintain and reproduce the concept of bhodrota (i.e. respectability) as a
part of the bhodrolok’s middle-class identity and neoliberal aspirations. My thesis defines
‘bhodrota’ as the cultural capital of respectability of the bhodrolok class, and includes the
embodied practices that reproduces and legitimises it as symbolic capital through a language
of normativity and assures the hegemony of the middle-class. But this cultural taboo is also
challenged and remixed by new adults from the bhodrolok growing up in a globalised world;
thereby, the concept of bhodrota is also challenged and changed as neoliberal aspirations of the
bhodrolok are articulated by the new members of their ton. The chosen demographic of my
thesis is specifically new young adults from urban middle-class families in their first year of
university (ages 19-20). I conducted six in-depth interviews with new adults from this
demographic, as well as a key informant interview with the director of KOTHA, the only
existing sexuality education programme aimed at middle-class adolescents. Using both
secondary research into existing SRH programmes, their evaluations and reports, and primary
data from these interviews, I illustrate how the ‘bhodro’ landscape and habitus of middle-class
sexuality is created and enacted through the tension of defining and redefining the class identity
of the bhodrolok, within structures of heterosexual marriage normativity and homosociality.
My thesis demonstrates and explains the burgeoning need for a cultural ‘speakable sexuality’
for the middle-class, as opposed to the existing silence of the taboo, to help adults navigate the
anxieties and ambiguities of their sexual subjectivities and discourse in a society burdened by
its patriarchal rape culture and its stigmatisation of sexuality.