DOI 10.60531/INSIGHTOUT.2024.2.9| GUHA: QUEERING CALCUTTA_ INSIGHTOUT 2(2024) 60Swati GuhaQueering CalcuttaPostcolonial Urban Space and Gender DiversityABSTRACTThis project takes the city of Calcutta, West Bengal, India as its empirical base to criticallyexamine its non-inclusive and majoritarian character. Calcutta, which was the capital of BritishIndia during the colonial period offers an incredible multicultural spectrum in which people ofdifferent colour, religion and linguistic affiliations live together. Therefore, Calcutta is oftenflaunted as the cultural capital of India because of its high education rate, artistic sensibilityand progressive cultural milieu. However, when it comes to polysemic gender experiences, Calcutta, which is figuratively called the City of Joy, fails to offer much to be euphoric about for itsQueer population. Barring a handful of elite educational institutes and service sectors, Calcutta does not visibilize a robust Queered environment, conducive for its LGBTQ+ members. Thisproject inquires into specific case studies of homophobia and caste-religion-discrimination,witnessed in university campuses, urban transport avenues and government office facilities tounderstand how urban infrastructures in Calcutta respond to the question of Queer.CVSwati Guha, an award-winning Bengali litterateur, has also been an academic administrator. Currently, she is the Director of the Institute of Language Studies and Research(ILSR) inKolkata. Previously, Dr. Guha was the Director of the Nazrul Centre for Social and CulturalStudies at Kazi Nazrul University. She combines her creative and academic writings throughcross-disciplinary approaches. Her fictional world is animated by her academic-administrativefieldwork in urban and remote locations, involving subalternized women and issues of development. Her creative oeuvre has focused on the intersection of gendered narratives and socialpower dynamics in India.KEYWORDSQueer, Infrastructure, Queering Calcutta, HomophobiaSwati Guha,“Queering Calcutta: Postcolonial Urban Space and Gender Diversity”,insightOut. Journal on Gender and Sexuality in STEM Collections and Cultures, 2(2024),59–66, DOI: 10.60531/insightout.2024.2.9DOI: 10.60531/insightout.2024.2.9Published under license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0