产品展示
  • 12V24V伏纯铜汽车电瓶充电器通用智能大功率农用车收割电瓶充电机
  • 锐搏专用22新款汉兰达保险杠15-17-18-21款前后大包围改装配件
  • 适用于03-04-05-06-07款七代雅阁前大灯雅阁车头灯前灯半总成
  • 风帆蓄电池T6适配福特福克斯13款蒙迪欧致胜吉利博越帝豪汽车电瓶
  • 瓦尔塔原车汽车电瓶蓄电池福特蒙迪欧致胜福克斯福睿斯翼虎博越T6
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车音响

College theatre group disqualified for saying 'bra' and 'panty' on stage

2024-06-15 06:04:30      点击:028

In a bizarre turn of events, the Delhi Government's cultural wing has taken offence to a college theater group's performance and has "disqualified" them on charges of "obscenity" for using words like "bra" and "panty" in a play, reported the Hindustan Times.

SEE ALSO:Several Indian colleges ban sexist singers from performing on campus

Lakshya - The Theatre Society Of Kamala Nehru College had staged their annual production, Shahira Ke Naam, on Jan. 27 in New Delhi's Mandi House as a part of a theater competition organized by the state government.

The event coordinator reportedly alleged, "They've [Lakshya] broken the rules about obscenity... Not just words like bra and panty, they've used several other cuss words, too."

This is moral policing not only at its worst but also its most ludicrous, where women's innerwear is being considered "obscene" and unacceptable.

Lakshya lashed out at the organizers on their official Facebook page. They "criticized this hypocrisy" in no uncertain terms. "Derogatory and demeaning abuses are acceptable in art forms, but a reference of feminine clothing offends people," they wrote.

Mashable Top StoriesStay connected with the hottest stories of the day and the latest entertainment news.Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletterBy signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

Mashable Indiareached out to Lakshya for comment. The group said that they "don't wish to engage [sic] media anymore." Calls made to Kamala Nehru College went unanswered as well.

Shahira Ke Naamis a play revolving around the lives of six girls in a hostel and the pranks they play on each other. One of the scenes dwells upon how they mark their underwear in order to avoid confusion. And it is thisscene that set tongues wagging at the event.

The convener of the theater society wrote in a Facebook post, "So traumatized were the organizers by the words that they choked on them and could not bring themselves to spell out those "appalling" "disgusting" words while telling us the reason for disqualification. When the students asked them, they ran away from them."

Social media, too, was enraged at the cultural wing's double standards.

Problem lies with the mentality indeed.


Featured Video For You
Cass McCombs on Feminism

Libya case not applicable to NK: Cheong Wa Dae
Why China can't push North Korea harder