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Artistic Agency in the Contemporary Indian Anglophone Picturebook: A Study of Pardhan Gond Aesthetics and Tara Books

Authors :
SINGHAL, SAMARTH
Doyle, Jennifer1
Khan, Ruhi
SINGHAL, SAMARTH
SINGHAL, SAMARTH
Doyle, Jennifer1
Khan, Ruhi
SINGHAL, SAMARTH
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

My dissertation traces the valences of a moment in contemporary Anglophone publishing in India that is slowly marking the presence of an articulate Indigenous voice. In contemporary India, the Adivasi–sometimes called tribal or Indigenous, each term mired in a painful history––exist in a perpetual zone of disenfranchisement. With increasing encroachment upon traditionally held resources and occupations, Adivasi individuals have had to negotiate an exponentially threatened lifeworld. However, there is resistance to be found. A complex picture of Adivasi creative intervention emerges, challenging any attempt to speak for the Adivasi body by the dominant order. I examine the possibilities of one such intervention via the contemporary Anglophone picturebook published by the alternative publisher Tara Books. Tara Books has established itself as a publishing house reputed for its significant and sensitive collaboration with more than one Adivasi community.The first chapter locates the 2014 Creation, illustrated by Pardhan Gond artist Bhajju Shyam, as a site of a self-representation in response to anthropological and visual appropriation of the tribal body, while chapter two examines Bhajju Shyam’s 2004 The London Jungle Book as a reversal of the colonial-ethnographic gaze. Chapter three examines the 2009 Flight of the Mermaid, also illustrated by Bhajju Shyam, to trace the possibilities of understanding Pardhan Gond art as an example of speculative aesthetics. The fourth chapter discusses Durgabai Vyam’s 2005 Sultana’s Dream and 2010 The Churki Burki Book of Rhymes to focus the picturebook on gender. Women’s labor is understood to be the “alphabet of Gond art” but its recognition is missing in the list of Pardhan Gond practitioners today. Using literary analysis, visual analysis, and ethnographic interviews of the artists, the study builds on the pioneering work of scholars Michelle Raheja, Saloni Mathur, Jyotindra Jain, Roma Chatterji, and Aurogeeta Das; and breaks new g

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1449576704
Document Type :
Electronic Resource