The National Law School of India University (NLSIU), Bengaluru is hosting a lecture by Dr. Shannon Philip, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Cambridge. Titled “Grindr Wars: Neoliberalism and the Postcolonial Queer Subject in India,” the lecture will take place on Thursday, April 2, 2026, at 5 pm at the Conference Room, Training Centre, NLSIU.
The lecture is open to the public. Please register to attend.
Abstract
Grindr Wars: Neoliberalism and the Postcolonial Queer Subject in India
The rapid digitalisation, neo-liberalisation, and globalisation in India are profoundly transforming sexual identities and sexual politics. In particular, dating apps like Grindr are changing the ways in which young gay men’s identities and relationships are formed, mediated, and embodied. In this talk, Dr. Shannon Philip ethnographically explores the ways in which Grindr offers much needed visibility to young middle-class gay men in India where powerful heteropatriarchies marginalise their sexualities and masculinities. Yet at the same time, the inequality that marks this digital and neoliberal expansion means that gay dating applications like Grindr also reproduce these very inequalities of caste and class.
He reveals in particular the growing commodification of gay identities and sexualities that is mediated through digital platforms, producing a hierarchy between ‘classy gays’ and ‘poor gays’. Desire itself becomes commodified wherein ‘poor gays’ are not desirable bodies or identities and the performance of class and consumption becomes central to claims of sexual desirability. Grindr’s geolocating technology allows middle-class gay men to discriminate against ‘poor gays’ through the spatial and urban inequalities of cities like Delhi and Kochi, further amplifying the inequalities of caste and class. In this context, ‘Grindr Wars’ take place, which reveal the social and symbolic tensions, clashes, and violences that shape queer life in India today.
About the Speaker
Dr. Shannon Philip is Assistant Professor of Gender and Sexuality at the Department of Sociology, University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Girton College, Cambridge. He is also a Research Associate at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. His first book titled ‘Becoming Young Men in a New India: Masculinities, Gender Relations and Violence in the Postcolony‘ was published by Cambridge University Press in 2022.
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