Welcome to Loot.co.za!
Sign in / Register |Wishlists & Gift Vouchers |Help | Advanced search
|
Your cart is empty |
|||
Showing 1 - 7 of 7 matches in All Departments
For its 34th Curve commission (2021), the Barbican presents the first major London solo exhibition by Mumbai-based artist Shilpa Gupta, whose celebrated practice explores physical and ideological boundaries and how, as individuals, we come to feel a sense of isolation or belonging. Gupta presents and builds on her acclaimed project For, In Your Tongue, I Cannot Fit (2017-18), an experiential sound installation of 100 microphones suspended above 100 metal spikes, each piercing a page inscribed with a fragmented verse of poetry by a writer who has been imprisoned for their work, writings or beliefs. Spanning the eighth to the 21st centuries, the soundscape alternates between languages, each microphone uttering verses of poetry, echoed by its 99 counterparts. Giving a voice to those who have been silenced, Gupta's haunting installation highlights the fragility of personal expression while raising urgent questions of censorship and resistance. Gupta also presents new drawings and sculptures that reflect on issues of confinement and the right to free expression. The book includes a loose-insert postcard featuring a poem in Urdu and English by the revolutionary Pakistani poet Faiz Ahmad Faiz.
Breaching the Citadel, part of the Sexual Violence and Impunity in South Asia series, supported by the International Development Research Centre, Canada, puts India in focus, showcasing new and pathbreaking research on sexual violence and impunity. Bringing together both young and established scholars, the book explores medical protocols, the functioning of the law, the psychosocial making of impunity, histories of sexual violence in places like Kashmir, the media, and sectarian violence, among other timely topics. The essays Urvashi Butalia has collected here were developed through comparative research and a series of workshops, so each entry is peer-reviewed and on the cutting edge of the field. Breaching the Citadel breaks new ground as it uncovers and analyzes the link between sexual violence and the structures and institutions that enable perpetrators to act with impunity.
The partition of India into two countries, India and Pakistan,
caused one of the most massive human convulsions in history. Within
the space of two months in 1947 more than twelve million people
were displaced. A million died. More than seventy-five thousand
women were abducted and raped. Countless children disappeared.
Homes, villages, communities, families, and relationships were
destroyed. Yet, more than half a century later, little is known of
the human dimensions of this event. In "The Other Side of Silence,"
Urvashi Butalia fills this gap by placing people--their individual
experiences, their private pain--at the center of this epochal
event.
The Partition of British India into the nations of India and
Pakistan in 1947 and the further redrawing of the borders in 1971
to create Bangladesh were major, wrenching events whose effects are
still felt today in the everyday lives of people in all three
nations in fundamental ways--yet these events have never been
explored in all their aspects.
India is changing. And at the heart of this change are its women.
The change is widespread and varied, individual and collective,
reflecting the full spectrum of women's lives, whether in politics
or in economics, in business, or within their daily domestic work.
This book maps--in words and in one hundred and fifty marvelous
color photographs--some of the changes that are both visible and
invisible in India today.
The Partition of India in 1947 precipitated one of the greatest upheavals in history. Pieced together from oral narratives and testimonies of participants this text is a personal chronicle of partition that places people, rather than high politics, centre stage.
|
You may like...
Europe Beyond Universalism and…
S. Lindberg, S. Prozorov, …
Hardcover
|