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Based on over a decade of ethnographic fieldwork in the South
Indian state of Tamil Nadu, Onscreen/Offscreen is an exploration of
the politics and being of filmic images. The book examines
contestations inside and outside the Tamil film industry over the
question "what is an image?" Answers to this question may be found
in the ontological politics that take place on film sets, in
theatre halls, and in the social fabric of everyday life in South
India, from populist electoral politics and the gendering of social
space to caste uplift and domination. Bridging and synthesizing
linguistic anthropology, film studies, visual studies, and media
anthropology, Onscreen/Offscreen rethinks key issues across a
number of fields concerned with the semiotic constitution of social
life, from the performativity and ontology of images to questions
of spectatorship, realism, and presence. In doing so, it offers
both a challenge to any approach that would separate image from
social context and a new vision for linguistic anthropology beyond
the question of "language."
In Doing Style, Constantine V. Nakassis explores the world of youth
and mass media in South India, where what Tamil youth call "style"
anchors their day-to-day lives and media worlds. Through intimate
ethnographic descriptions of college life in Tamil Nadu, Nakassis
explores the complex ways that acts and objects of style such as
brand fashion, English slang, and film representations express the
multiple desires and anxieties of this generation, who live in the
shadow of the promise of global modernity. As Nakassis shows, while
signs of the global, modern world are everywhere in
post-liberalization India, for most of these young people this
world is still very distant--a paradox that results in youth's
profound sense of being in between. This in-betweenness manifests
itself in the ambivalent quality of style, the ways in which
stylish objects are necessarily marked as counterfeit, mixed, or
ironical. In order to show how this in-betweenness materializes in
particular media, Nakassis explores the entanglements between youth
peer groups and the sites where such stylish media objects are
produced, arguing that these entanglements deeply condition the
production and circulation of the media objects themselves. The
result is an important and timely look at the tremendous forces of
youth culture, globalization, and mass media as they interact in
the vibrancy of a rapidly changing India.
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