The Jumping Devils : a tale of circus bodies
Auteurs : Poyyaprath Rayaroth, Nisha (Auteur)
Lieu de publication : New Delhi
Éditeur : Nehru Memorial Museum and Library
Date de publication : 2015
Université : Lund University, Sweden
Programme d'étude : Human Geography Department,
Cycle d'étude : Postdoctorat
Langue : Anglais
Description : 27 p. ; 28 cm
Sujets :
Histoire arts du cirque - Inde
Compagnies de cirque - Inde
Arts du cirque - Aspect social
Résumé :
Having watched the spectacular performance of Kannan Bombayo, a ‘dark’ acrobat from Malabar in a British circus touring Berlin, Adolf Hitler is said to have exclaimed, “The Jumping Devil of India”. In 1959, the King Pole magazine published from London wonders: “Today there are several really large Indian circuses whose artists are predominantly young girls, most of whom hail from a place called KERALA. Who are these girls and where do they get their training?” This presentation will trace the significant yet unexplored history of circus bodies, its spaces, techniques and transgressions that produced those renowned acrobats from Malabar who ruled the tents across borders in the first half of twentieth century. The trajectory of this enquiry will then move on to the contemporary shifts which have occurred in this itinerant topography. In the beginning of the twenty first century the circus body was caught up in a discourse of ‘cruelty’ that culminated in a ban from the apex court of the nation teasing open crucial questions regarding the dominance and legitimacy of ‘tradition’. The line of enquiry shall also take us to problematic livelihood issues and labor migration across boundaries today, within the frame of the wandering tents.
Localisation : Traitement documentaire B
Cote : 791.309 54 P892j 2015