'National Identity Is a Kind of Drag': Why Duckie Are Queering the Borders for Brighton Pride

There is plenty to celebrate as countries across the world recognise same sex relationships. At the same time there is still much further to go before equality is achieved. In the UK while gay marriage has been legalised in England, Scotland and Wales, it has been repeatedly blocked in Northern Ireland.

If you have a UK passport, you can be considered lucky. UK nationals have freedom of movement to 174 countries and territories (89% of the countries of the world), ranking the British passport 1st (tied with Finnish, German, Swedish and the US). By comparison, having an Afghanistan passport gives you free access to just 28. Passports, like the borders that they are used to police, are human inventions.

For our latest show which comes to Brighton Dome for Brighton Pride, we will restrict the movement of club punters in a playful but thought provoking experiment which seeks to question the automatic assumption that borders are necessary for the safety and security of nation states.

The four countries we have chosen to represent in the new show - entitled Border Force - are Brazil, Russia, India, and China. The BRIC economies, also called the 'Big Four', are representative of the apparent shift in global economic power away from the developed G7 economies towards the developing world. The holding form of Duckie's Border Force is not reliant on these specific countries; we could have chosen others. However, if money is power, and if the BRIC economies do overtake the G7 there will be a global re-balancing of control and influence. The privileges currently accorded to UK passport holders may no longer carry the same weight. Put simply, they might be the countries we would prefer to live in. Economic migration may well take on a whole new direction.

In the Duckie clubland we are not hoping to do justice to the complexities of the countries represented. Each country name is firmly in inverted commas. While reducing historical, geographical and social realities to the 'tourist snapshot' or the 'Sunday newspaper photo-spread' we want to press the idea that national identity, like gender, is a kind of 'drag'. We perform our nationhood.

This isn't to say that there is choice. Oppressive social norms can be just as harsh in forcing conformity for what it means to be 'English' as they are for what it means to be a 'man'.

This may be especially true in countries where there are restrictions on LGBTQI personal expression and where love is policed. Brazil may have legalized same sex marriage and put anti-discrimination laws in place but it is still the most dangerous place on Earth to be transgendered. Last year 113 trans people were murdered, half of all reported cases worldwide. Russia's notorious anti-gay 'propaganda' law has further institutionalised hatred of LGBTQI people, with permits for Pride parades banned, activists intimidated and arrested, and violent attacks ignored. Although ancient Indian culture offers many examples of same sex love and, for example, the veneration of transgendered gods, homosexuality in India was criminalised (under British rule) in the 1860s. The law may not be enforced and India has seen a smattering of same sex weddings but there is no legislation in place to protect LGBTQI rights. The 'Gay Happiness Index' which measured acceptance of same-sex relationships in 127 countries of the world, put China 63rd, just above the halfway point. (The UK is 23rd, Brazil is 39th, India 81st, and Russia 89th.) China's abuses of human rights have been subject to international scrutiny, but with increasing economic power, so too, it would seem, comes movement towards freedom of expression. Rights afforded to LGBTQI people in China may well act as a barometer for those rights across the world.

There is plenty to celebrate as countries across the world recognise same sex relationships. At the same time there is still much further to go before equality is achieved. In the UK while gay marriage has been legalised in England, Scotland and Wales, it has been repeatedly blocked in Northern Ireland.

We hope that Border Force can be a reminder that the rights we expect are not felt across the world.

Your passport is an accident of birth and the world remains shockingly unequal. Migrants from Africa and the Middle East are dying in the Mediterranean sea while rich Europeans take nice holidays abroad. There is a global refugee crisis and the discussion in the UK is focused on protectionist 'British jobs for British workers'. Many believe the nation state is essential for the establishment of a functioning democracy and therefore real global freedom of movement remains a utopian dream.

The desire of governments and peoples across the world to establish new borders or reinforce those that already exist, even for example from a left wing nationalist party in Scotland, leave us concerned. At the same time as believing in self-determination, the politics of fear and envy is creating a false binary between 'us' and 'them'. As international travel and global communication become easier, we are increasingly isolating ourselves. We see the consequences of border controls in the most tragic circumstances as people die or are killed, trafficked and abused, fleeing conflict, or dire social situations, or just because they are seeking a better life for themselves and their families.

Wherever you stand on the issue of border controls for the UK and whatever your judgement is about who should be allowed to cross them, it is easy to forget how privileged British passport holders are in their freedom to travel the world.

Duckie: Border Force is at Brighton Dome on Sat 1 Aug. For more information or to book tickets visit the website

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