Art, Politics and the Environment in Bangladesh

50 Years On

Art, Politics and the Environment in Bangladesh
Lotte Hoek, Nusrat S Chowdhury
RRP:
NZ$ 150.00
Our Price:
NZ$ 120.00
Hardback
h229 x 153mm - 250pg
31 Dec 2022 UK
International import eta 7-19 days
9781785273414
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In ' Art, Politics and the Environment in Bangladesh' the notion of staging guides the authors to explore how shifting social and political realities of Bangladesh unfold from historical events and cultural processes that are neither straightforward nor self-evident. The essays trace these unfoldings from varied disciplinary perspectives. The trope of staging that is investigated is multivalent. Consider, for instance, the massive enthusiasm for staging local elections for villages that have disappeared owing to the movement of rivers or the resistance to the shrimping industry in areas disastrously poldered by previous Dutch development interventions. They help visualize the impact of the continuous rewriting and remaking - and at times erasure - of the spaces and histories of a region variously known as East Bengal, East Pakistan and Bangladesh. The quandaries that colonial bureaucratic classifications pose for staging the boundaries of indigenous peoples in contemporary Bangladesh, or the politics of reception of the cinematic representations of the 1971 war, produced decades apart, are examples of such ground-making. Each essay rethinks long-standing assumptions drawing on a combination of new empirical research and theoretical perspectives within anthropology, theatre and film studies, political science and development studies.
Nusrat Sabina Chowdhury is an anthropologist who writes on popular sovereignty and political communication focusing on Bangladesh. Lotte Hoek is a media anthropologist who writes about the politics and aesthetics of the moving image in South Asia, particularly in Bangladesh. She is the author ' Cut-Pieces: Celluloid Obscenity and Popular Cinema in Bangladesh' (2014) and editor of the journal, ' BioScope: South Asian Screen Studies' .

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