Fall 2013

Public Culture in South Asia

Listed in: Anthropology and Sociology, as ANTH-255  |  Asian Languages and Civilizations, as ASLC-255

Faculty

Nusrat S. Chowdhury (Section 01)

Description

(Offered as ANTH 255 and ASLC 255) This course on South Asian public culture starts from the premise that modernity today is a global experience. Most societies today possess the means to produce local versions of the modern, as Arjun Appadurai and Carol Breckenridge have argued. In this course, we will collectively approach mass culture in South Asia--a staggeringly complex cultural entity--with an eye towards understanding emergent forms of subjectivity, agency, pleasure, and embodied experience. While rethinking the predominantly European notions of publicity, we will study how popular culture in South Asia reflects the intersecting processes of nationalism, globalization, and economic liberalization. Our focus will be on the interface of media and modernity, and in so doing, on the complex negotiations between cultural producers and consumers. We will discuss film, advertising, spatial politics, and popular art to make sense of the region’s postcolonial public life.

Limited to 25 student.  Fall semester.  Professor Chowdhury.

If Overenrolled: Priority give to majors in Anthropology and ASLC.

Offerings

2022-23: Not offered
Other years: Offered in Fall 2013, Fall 2014, Spring 2017