Performance and the Culture of Nationalism
Routledge India (Verlag)
978-0-367-70468-1 (ISBN)
This book studies the intersection of performance and nationalism in South Asia.It traces the emergence of the culture of nationalism from the late nineteenth century through to contemporary times. Drawing on various theatrical performance texts, it looks at the ways in which performative narratives have reflected the national narrative and analyses the role performance has played in engendering nationhood. The volume discusses themes such as political martyrdom as performative nationalism, the revitalisation of nationalism through new media, the sanitisation of physical gestures in dance, the performance of nationhood through violence in Tajiki films, as well as K-Pop and the new northeastern identity in India.
A unique contribution to the study of nationalism, this book will be useful for scholars and researchers of history, theatre and performance studies, cultural studies, postcolonial studies, modern India, Asian studies, political studies, social anthropology and sociology.
Sarvani Gooptu is Professor of Asian Literary and Cultural Studies at Netaji Institute for Asian Studies, Kolkata, India. Her main areas of research are nationalism and culture in Asia. Among her publications are three books: The Actress in the Public Theatres of Calcutta (2015), The Music of Nationhood: Dwijendralal Roy of Bengal (2018), which received the Hiralal Award for Best Woman Historian at Indian History Congress 2019, and Knowing Asia, Being Asian, Cosmopolitanism and Nationalism in Bengali Periodicals 1860–1940 (2021) as well as two co-edited volumes. She is passionate about music and regularly performs in music programmes. Mimasha Pandit is Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Mankar College, Purba Bardhaman, West Bengal, India. Her main areas of research are the history of ideas and their performance in the wider public sphere in colonial Bengal. Her PhD dissertation was published in 2019, titled Performing Nationhood:The Emotional Roots of Swadeshi Nationhood in Bengal, 1905–1912. Recently, she has contributed to Itihaaser Bitarka, Bitarker Itihaas (published in 2022) as well as to Transcultural Humanities in South Asia (2022), edited by Waseem Anwar and Nousheen Yousuf.
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Performing Nation, Nationalising Performance
I: Framing Parameters of Narrative/National/Lived Experience
A: South Asia
Framing Martyrdom as Cultural Performance in Bengali Revolutionary Nationalism
Shukla Sanyal
The Making of the Audience in Colonial Bengal Theatre
Sunetra Mitra
Indian Nationalism Embodied Through Dance
Amita Dutt
Shifting Hues in a City’s Culture Traced through the 88 keys of a Piano
Subha Das Mollick
B: Rhizomatic Pattern: East & Southeast Asia
The Politics of Cultural Intimacies in Asia: Writing about Dramatic Performances
in East and South East Asia in Twentieth Century Bengali Literary Journals
Sarvani Gooptu
II: Small Voices of Alterity
A: South Asia
Remembering and Encountering Death Collectively: Practice and Performance in the ‘Khawhar Hla’ (Songs for the Dead) among the Zo Christians in North Eastern India.
Anup Shekhar Chakraborty
Identity through Substraction: K-Pop Fans from North East India Create a New Identity of their Own
Sabik Pandit
8. The Formula of the Film and the Performance into Modernity
Susmita Dasgupta
B: Rhizomatic Pattern: Central Asia
9. Pains and Pangs of Post-Soviet Nationhood: Experiences of Tajikistan through the Pastiches of Celluloid Representation
Nandini Bhattacharya
III: Spectacularity, Mythification& Ritualistic Understanding/Countering of National Identity
A: South Asia
10. The Work of Art, The Mirror of Time: Theatre, Actress and the Audience in the Nineteenth Century
Mausumi Mukhopadhyay
11. Ram Ke Naam: Sloganeering/Othering Identity in Ramjanmabhoomi Movement
Mimasha Pandit
12. The Sword Unsheathed: 19th Century Bengal and A Postmodern Reading of Utpal Dutt’s Tiner Tolowar (The Tin Sword).
Purna Chowdhury
B: Rhizomatic Pattern: Southeast Asia
13. Identity through Reiteration: Myth, Memory, Magic in Tess Uriza Holthe’s When the Elephants Dance
Dipanjan Chatterjee
Index
Erscheinungsdatum | 26.07.2023 |
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Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 156 x 234 mm |
Gewicht | 360 g |
Themenwelt | Kunst / Musik / Theater ► Theater / Ballett |
Geisteswissenschaften ► Geschichte | |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Soziologie ► Gender Studies | |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Soziologie ► Spezielle Soziologien | |
ISBN-10 | 0-367-70468-4 / 0367704684 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-367-70468-1 / 9780367704681 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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