Tag:colonialism

How Colonial Laws Still Control Women

When the British Empire arrived in South Asia, it did not just bring railways, courts, and clerks. It brought sex laws. And many of...

How Colonial Morality Erased a Third Gender

In Fiji, gender diversity is not a new import, a Western fad, or a social media invention. Long before modern debates about transgender rights...

The Emotional Cost of Being an Indo-Dutch Woman

For many second- and third-generation Indo women born in the Netherlands (Belanda), Indonesia is not a homeland in the usual sense. It is not...

A Law That Treated Wives As Stolen Property

When Malaysia’s Federal Court quietly struck down Section 498 of the Penal Code in December, the headline sounded almost quaint: a colonial-era law criminalising...

The Seductive, Erotic Power of Old Shanghai Style

Shanghai’s erotic nostalgia does not shout. It smolders. It drifts through cigarette smoke and silk fabric, through the soft click of heels on parquet...

When Europe Profited From Trafficked Chinese Girls

In the shadowy underbelly of Asia’s most prosperous colonial ports, a gendered trade flourished long before the term “human trafficking” entered law books or...

When Colonial Love Had No Legal Rights

In the long history of the Dutch East Indies, few figures sit more uncomfortably at the intersection of intimacy, power, and empire than the...

Is This India’s Most Feminist Marriage Tradition?

In a country where marriage is still overwhelmingly shaped by patriarchy, caste, family pressure and male initiative, there is a corner of India where...
Auntie Spices It Out
Commentary

Millions of Parents Turn to Apps to Marry Off Kids

February 27, 2026

Oh darling, of course the parents downloaded the app. You really thought the generation that survived ration coupons, housing reforms, exam wars, property bubbles, and the one-child policy was going to sit quietly while their precious only son announces he’s “focusing on himself”? Please. These aunties did not endure thirty years of sacrifice for their family tree to end in a one-bedroom rental with a houseplant named Kevin. Let’s be honest: this isn’t about romance. It’s about security, face, continuity, and the deeply rooted belief that adulthood equals marriage. For...
Commentary

Lesbians vs. Trans Women: When Minorities Fight

February 27, 2026

Ah, sisters. We have this extraordinary, almost Olympic-level ability to divide ourselves and fight the wrong battles while the house is literally on fire. Look around the world. Women’s bodily autonomy is being rolled back. LGBTQ people are criminalised from Kampala to Kuala Lumpur. Authoritarian governments are policing classrooms, bedrooms, and wombs. Economic inequality is widening. Domestic violence shelters are underfunded. Online misogyny is algorithmically turbocharged. And yet here we are — sharpening our claws for each other. I’m not saying these questions about sex, gender, identity, and lesbian space...
Commentary

Family WhatsApp Groups Are Watching Us

February 26, 2026

Let me tell you something about family WhatsApp groups, darlings. They are not innocent. They are not “just for updates.” They are mini-parliaments, surveillance hubs, emotional labor factories, and occasionally — digital crime scenes. I belong to several. Of course I do. Big Asian family, remember? Aunties, uncles, cousins, nieces, the whole orchestra. Every morning: flowers, blessings, good-morning GIFs that sparkle like they were designed in 2003. And who sends them? The women. Always the women. Because apparently even in cyberspace, it’s our job to keep the peace, keep the...
Commentary

A Day in The Life of a Patpong Girl

February 26, 2026

I have walked through Patpong more times than I can count — in heels, in flats, in righteous feminist anger, and occasionally just in anthropological curiosity. And let me tell you something: if you think a “Patpong girl” is a fantasy character invented for lonely men on holiday, you have understood absolutely nothing. She is a migrant worker. She is a remittance machine. She is an informal economist with better negotiation skills than half the men in Bangkok’s financial district. When people say “bar girl,” I always want to ask:...
Commentary

Club Bosses: Asia’s Nightlife Queens

February 25, 2026

I have a soft spot for women who own the night. Over the years — from Manila’s humid backstreets to Bangkok’s neon arteries and Jakarta’s stubbornly defiant dance floors — I’ve met many of them. Some became sources. Some became drinking buddies after closing time. A few became lifetime friends. And let me tell you something: these women are among the toughest people I know. You don’t survive decades in clubs and discos by being delicate. You survive because you can read a room in three seconds flat. Because you...
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