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Representing Calcutta - Modernity, Nationalism and the Colonial Uncanny (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R4,577
Discovery Miles 45 770
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Representing Calcutta - Modernity, Nationalism and the Colonial Uncanny (Hardcover, New)
Series: Asia's Transformations/Asia's Great Cities
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This major new postcolonial study addresses the questions of
modernity and space that haunt our perceptions of Calcutta.
This book explores the politics of representation and the cultural
changes that occurred in the city as its residents negotiated the
idea of being 'modern'. Its dynamic range encompasses Asian Studies
and History, Architecture and Urbanism
The text responds to two inter-related concerns about the city.
First is the image of Calcutta as the worst-case scenario of a
Third World city -- the proverbial "city of dreadful nights. Second
is the changing nature of the city's public spaces - the demise of
certain forms of urban sociality that have been mourned in recent
literature as the passing of Bengali modernity. Drawing on its
postcolonial and spatial theory, it examines the city under British
colonial rule as well as its later incarnations and explores issues
such as gender, identity and nationalism.
We begin with an analysis of the British attitudes that produced a
dominant image of a problem-ridden city in the nineteenth century,
and then proceed to explore other ways of envisioning it,
emphasizing various modes of Bengali spatial imagination and
practice. The crafting of a nationalist identity was central to
modern Bengali spatial imagination and was animated by the
conflicting responses of Bengali residents to city life as they
attempted to work out the ethics of their public and private selves
in literature, art, residential design, and in the creation of new
urban spaces.
This new text problematizes the idea of representing the city -
both colonialist and nationalist. It argues for models of urbanism,
nationalism, and modernity that cannot befathomed by neat
renderings into black/white, spiritual/material, but must be
understood in terms of strategic "translations" between cultural
and political domains. An essential and challenging new work from
this leading author.
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