Ph.D., English, University of Pennsylvania B.A., College Scholar, Cornell University
Anjali Arondekar is Professor of Feminist Studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Founding Co-Director of the Center for South Asian Studies, UCSC. Her research engages the poetics and politics of sexuality, colonialism and historiography, with a focus on South Asia. She is the author of For the Record: On Sexuality and the Colonial Archive in India (Duke University Press, 2009, Orient Blackswan, India, 2010), winner of the Alan Bray Memorial Book Award for best book in lesbian, gay, or queer studies in literature and cultural studies, Modern Language Association (MLA), 2010. Her second book, Abundance: Sexuality's History (Duke University Press, 2023), grows out of her interest in the archival figurations of sexuality, caste and empire in colonial British and Portuguese India.
“Mehfil: An Afterword,” Pakistan Desires, (Durham: Duke University Press, March 2023).
“Telling Tales: Archives of the Geopolitical,” in Daniel Marshal and Zeb Tortorici, Eds. Turning Archival: The Life of the Historical in Queer Studies (Durham: Duke University Press, July 2022), 164-182.
“On Differences,” in Lisa Bjorkman, Ed. Bombay Brokers: Ethnography in the Interregnum (Durham: Duke University Press, 2021), 233-241
“Pornography and Its Dis/Contents: A Roundtable Discussion with Anjali Arondekar, Richard Fung and Sylvia Chong” in Gina Masequesmay and Sean Metzger, eds. Embodying Asian/American Sexualities (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2009) 29-41.
"Lingering Pleasures, Perverted Texts: Reading Colonial Desire in Kipling’s Anglo-India Fiction” in Richard Ruppel, ed. Imperial Desire: Dissident Sexualities and Colonial Literature (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2003) 65-89
Review/ Review Essays:
“Go (Away) West!” State of the Field Review, GLQ, 28: 3, June 2022, 463-72.