NishantUpadhyay

  • Associate Professor
  • Associate Chair of Graduate Studies
  • ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES
  • GENDER AND SEXUALITY STUDIES
Dr. Nishant Upadhyay
Address

Pronouns: they / them / theirs

Office Hours

Education

PhD, Social and Political Thought, York University, Canada, 2016
MA, Social and Political Thought, York University, Canada, 2010听
BA(H), Economics & Development Studies, Queen鈥檚 University, Canada, 2007

Research Interests

Asian (North) American Studies; Queer & Trans Studies; Transnational Feminisms and Sexualities; Anti-colonial & Decolonial Thinking; Settler Colonialism, Empire, and Authoritarianism; Intersections of Race, Caste, and Indigeneity; Anti-Caste Critiques, Brahminism, and Hindutva; South Asian Diaspora; Relationality and Solidarity; Critical University Studies

Affiliations

Women & Gender Studies
LGBTQ Studies
Center for Native American and Indigenous Studies
Center for Asian Studies


Nishant鈥檚 research and teaching focuses on settler colonialism, empire, and authoritarianism; intersections of race, caste, and indigeneity; queer and trans of color studies; and South Asian diaspora. They are the author of Indians on Indian Lands: Intersections of Race, Caste, and Indigeneity (University of Illinois Press, 2024). The book received the 鈥淥utstanding Contribution in Social Sciences鈥 Award by the Association of Asian American Studies (2026). The book examines the interwoven and simultaneous areas of dominant Indian caste complicity in processes of settler colonialism, antiblackness, racial capitalism, brahminical supremacy, Hindu nationalism, and heteropatriarchy. Resource extraction in British Columbia in the 1970s through the 1990s and in present-day Alberta offers examples of spaces that illuminate the dispossession of Indigenous peoples and simultaneously reveals racialized, gendered, and casted labor formations. Upadhyay juxtaposes these extraction sites with examples of anticolonial activism and solidarities from Tkaronto. Analyzing silence on settler colonialism and brahminical caste supremacy, Upadhyay upends the idea of dominant caste Indian diasporas as racially victimized and shows that claiming victimhood denies a very real complicity in enforcing other power structures. Exploring stories of quotidian proximity and intimacy between Indigenous and South Asian communities, Upadhyay offers meditations on anticolonial and anti-casteist ways of knowledge production, ethical relationalities, and solidarities. Book forums and reviews have been published in Ethnic Studies Review, Lateral: Journal of the Cultural Studies Association, Journal of Asian American Studies, Journal of Comparative Literature and Aesthetics, and Sikh Research Journal. The book has also been featured in podcasts such as Brown History Podcast, Return the Key, and Queerness and Storytelling in India.

Upadhyay鈥檚 work has been in published in journals such as the American Quarterly, Amerasia Journal, Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, Critical Ethnic Studies Journal, Cultural Studies, and Feminist Studies. They have edited a special issue of Sikh Formations: Religion, Culture, Theory (2014) on the Ghadar movement, and co-edited a special issue of Feral Feminisms (2015) on transnational feminist analysis of settler colonialism.

Nishant received their PhD at York University, Toronto in the Graduate Program of Social and Political Thought in 2016. Their dissertation received the National Women鈥檚 Studies Association/University of Illinois Press First Book Award in 2018. Prior to joining CU 糖心传媒, Nishant taught Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and Northern Arizona University.

At CU 糖心传媒, they teach within the areas of queer and trans of color studies, theories and foundations of ethnic studies, disability justice, US empire, and Asian American Studies. Their teaching grounds intersectional, transnational, abolitionist, and decolonial frameworks. In recognition of their teaching, they have received the Staff Integrity Award (2020), Best Should Teach Gold Award (2021), and Inaugural COMMrade Award by Communication Graduate Student Association (2024). In their classes, Upadhyay often assigns collective zine as the final project: Queer and Trans Futurisms: A BIPoC Visions Zine (Queer and Trans of Color Visions, Spring 2021), Guide to Pleasure Activism: Queer & Trans Visions (Queer and Trans of Color Visions, Spring 2022), Disability Justice: A 2024 Zine (Disability Justice, Spring 2024).


Publications

Single-authored Book

Indians on Indian Lands: Intersections of Race, Caste, and Indigeneity (University of Illinois Press, 2024).

Peer-reviewed Journal Articles (Selected) 鈥淔raught Solidarities: Diasporic Hindutva and Claims to Indigeneity,鈥 Amerasia Journal (2025).

鈥淎gainst Trans Inclusion in the Military: A Trans of Color Abolitionist Critique鈥, co-authored with A. I. Gleisberg, Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies (2023). 鈥淗indu Nation and its Queers: Caste, Islamophobia, and De/coloniality in India.鈥 Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies (2020). Article translated and published in Malayalam by Campus Alive. Reprint published Possibility of Politics in India: Democracy Against a Democratic State, Routledge Press (2025).

鈥淢aking of 鈥淢odel鈥 South Asians on the Tar Sands: Intersections of Race, Caste, and Indigeneity,鈥 Journal of the Critical Ethnic Studies (2019).

鈥淐an You Get More American Than Native American?鈥: (Racialized) Drag Americans, Settler Colonialism, and RuPaul鈥檚 Drag Race,鈥 Cultural Studies (2019).

鈥淔eminisms, Collaborations, Friendships: A Conversation,鈥 co-authored with Richa Nagar, 脰zlem Aslan, Nadia Hasan, Omme Rahemtullah, and Begum Uzun, Feminist Studies (2016).

鈥淧inkwatching Israel, Whitewashing Canada: Queer (Settler) Politics and Indigenous Colonization in Canada鈥, co-authored with Michael C. Jackman, WSQ: Women鈥檚 Studies Quarterly (2014).

Edited Special Journal Issues

鈥淐omplicities, Connections, and Struggles: Critical Transnational Feminist Analysis of Settler Colonialism,鈥 special guest co-editor of Feral Feminisms (2015), with Shaista Patel and Ghaida Moussa. 鈥淕hadar: A Living History,鈥 special guest editor of Sikh Formations: Religion, Culture, Theory (2014).

Contributions to Edited Collections (Selected)

鈥溾楩ree them all鈥: A conversation on Trans Abolitionist Visions with Jordan Garcia鈥, in Resistance and Abolition in the Borderlands: Confronting Trump鈥檚 Reign of Terror, eds. Arturo Aldama and Jessica Ordaz (University of Arizona Press, 2024).

鈥淭rans/lating Queer, Annihilating Caste, Decolonizing Praxis,鈥 co-authored with Sandeep Bakshi, in Routledge Handbook on Translation, Gender, and Feminism, eds. Luise von Flotow and Hala Kamal (Routledge Press, London: 2020).

鈥淏rown Bodies, Borders, and Boats: Reading Tamil 鈥業rregular Arrivants鈥 Through the History of the Komagata Maru," co-authored with Nadia Hasan, Sailaja Krishnamurti, Omme Rahemtullah, and Nayani Vathsaladevi-Thiyagarajah, in Charting Imperial Itineraries: Unmooring the Komagata Maru, eds. Rita K. Dhamoon, Davina Bhandar, Renisa Mawani, and Satwinder K. Bains (UBC Press, Vancouver: 2019). *Anthology received honorable mention from The Canadian Studies Network for the Best Edited Collection in 2020

Non-Peer Reviewed Journal Articles (Selected)听

鈥淎uthor鈥檚 Response鈥 to the curated book forum on Indians on Indians Lands, Ethnic Studies Review (2026).

鈥淎uthor鈥檚 Response鈥 to the curated book forum on Indians on Indians Lands, Sikh Research Journal (2025).

鈥淐oloniality Of White Feminism and Its Transphobia: A Comment on Burt,鈥 Feminist Criminology (2021).

鈥淕eographies of Occupation in South Asia鈥, co-authored with Nosheen Ali, Mona Bhan, Sahana Ghosh, Hafsa Kanjwal, Zunaira Komal, Deepti Misri, Shruti Mukherjee, Sabia Varma, and Ather Zia, Feminist Studies (2019). 鈥淧ernicious Continuities: Un/settling Violence, Race and Colonialism,鈥 Sikh Formations: Religion, Culture, Theory (2013).

Non-Academic Publications (Selected)

听鈥淐OVID Carnage in India: Politics of Hatred, Hindu Right, and Western Imperialism鈥, 糖心传媒 Weekly, (2021). 鈥淥n Atlanta and 糖心传媒 Shootings: Abolitionist Visions鈥, 糖心传媒 Weekly, (2021). 鈥淭rans Liberation & Colonial Erasures,鈥 Tilt West (2020). 鈥淨ueer Rights, Section 377, and Decolonizing Sexualities,鈥 Decolonizing Sexualities Network Blog (2018).

Updated: May 2026