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[ecrea] New book: Visual Histories of South Asia
Sun Jun 10 17:54:19 GMT 2018
NEW BOOK 'Visual Histories of South Asia' by Annamaria Motrescu-Mayes
and Marcus Banks (2018, Primus)
We are delighted to announce the publication of 'Visual Histories of
South Asia', edited by Annamaria Motrescu-Mayes and Marcus Banks (with a
Foreword by Christopher Pinney). This volume is one of the first
comprehensive contributions to the rapidly developing cross-disciplinary
scholarship that connects visual studies with South Asian
historiography. The key purpose of the book is to introduce scholars and
students of South Asian and Indian history to a detailed evaluation of
visual research methods as a valid research framework for new historical
studies. The volume identifies and evaluates current developments in
visual sociology and digital anthropology relevant to the study of
contemporary South Asian constructions of personal and national
identities. The thirteen contributions selected for this volume are of
immediate relevance to visual theorists and historians, sociologists and
cultural anthropologists, as well as to scholars of South Asian history
and culture. The volume includes contributions by Denis Vidal, Marcus
Banks, Josefine Baark, Thomas Simpson, Teresa Segura-Garcia, Annamaria
Motrescu-Mayes, Imma Ramos, Xavier Guegan, Adrian P. Ruprecht, Aaron
Bryant, Ronie Parciak, Souvik Naha, and Siddharth Pandey.
Reviews:
'This volume provides a rich feast of materials for anyone interested in
the visual cultures and history of visual representation in South Asia
and is notable as well for its fascinating exploration of the
intersection of Western and local photographic practices’ – David
MacDougall, Australian National University.
'This is a remarkable, genuinely interdisciplinary collection, and both
a marvellously rich addition to the study of the life of visual images
in South Asia, and a highly sophisticated contribution to debates of the
interdisciplinary study of visual culture' – James Laidlaw, William Wyse
Professor of Social Anthropology, Head of Division, Social Anthropology,
University of Cambridge.
'This is an outstanding contribution to a timely and relevant focus on
transregional visual history and historiography of South Asia. This
rescaling of what is often times an India-centric visual history is
accompanied by remarkably heterogeneous approaches from across
disciplines and methods, challenging notions of political, cultural,
religious or ethnic reifications. The book offers insights into original
material and a framework of rich epistemologies, entanglements,
relationalities and translations. It will encourage new generations of
scholars to further push boundaries of established canons and exploring
new frontiers of visual culture and history studies' – Christiane
Brosius, Chair of Visual & Media Anthropology, Heidelberg Centre for
Transcultural Studies, Heidelberg University.
'This is a unique and excellent contribution to the field of South Asian
visual studies, art history and cultural analysis. This text takes an
interdisciplinary approach while keeping its focus on the visual, on
material cultural and on art and aesthetics. It brings together
empirically rich and theoretically sophisticated analysis on
representations from colonial and post-colonial eras ranging from
colonial era photography to "tribal art," temple and video art. In doing
so it bridges a major gap in our understanding of South Asia's modern
history by using the idiom of visual culture and the politics of
representation' – Kamran Asdar Ali, University of Texas at Austin
Link to online stores: https://amzn.to/2y2d2aE and
http://www.primusbooks.com/showbookdetail.asp?bookid=202
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