Ishtyle

Ishtyle
Author: Kareem Khubchandani
Publsiher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 287
Release: 2020-07-16
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9780472054213

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Ishtyle follows queer South Asian men across borders into gay neighborhoods, nightclubs, bars, and house parties in Bangalore and Chicago. Bringing the cultural practices they are most familiar with into these spaces, these men accent the aesthetics of nightlife cultures through performance. Kareem Khubchandani develops the notion of “ishtyle” to name this accented style, while also showing how brown bodies inadvertently become accents themselves, ornamental inclusions in the racialized grammar of desire. Ishtyle allows us to reimagine a global class perpetually represented as docile and desexualized workers caught in the web of global capitalism. The book highlights a different kind of labor, the embodied work these men do to feel queer and sexy together. Engaging major themes in queer studies, Khubchandani explains how his interlocutors’ performances stage relationships between: colonial law and public sexuality; film divas and queer fans; and race, caste, and desire. Ultimately, the book demonstrates that the unlikely site of nightlife can be a productive venue for the study of global politics and its institutional hierarchies.

Passionate Modernity

Passionate Modernity
Author: Sanjay Srivastava
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 291
Release: 2020-11-29
Genre: Health & Fitness
ISBN: 9781000084160

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Combining historical and ethnographic analysis, this book deals with the making of the heterosexual imagination from the beginning of the twentieth century to the present in the Indian context. This unique book uses methods from anthropology, cultural studies and history to explore the making of modern cultures of sexuality in India. It provides an analysis of the sexual and domestic politics of the period by focusing on the vast corpus of publications and journals on sexology from the 1920s to the 1940s, and links Indian activities with those in other parts of the world. The author analyzes material that has thus far been outside the purview of scholarly studies, namely, ‘footpath pornography’, magazines such as Sexology Mirror (in Hindi), women’s magazines dealing explicitly with sex and sexuality.

Queer Nightlife

Queer Nightlife
Author: Kemi Adeyemi,Kareem Khubchandani,Ramon H. Rivera-Servera
Publsiher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2021-05-03
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9780472054787

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Evocative essays and interviews that celebrate the expressive possibilities of a world after dark

Retribution

Retribution
Author: Shubham Srivastava
Publsiher: Shubham Srivastava
Total Pages: 447
Release: 2024
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9182736450XXX

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Hip-Hop is considered the most influential art form of music. Retribution is the collection of poetry, rhymes, I made over time. This sure gonna make your world go upside down. Bluffing, na homie, just dive into it and feel the intensity of it.

Doing Style

Doing Style
Author: Constantine V. Nakassis
Publsiher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2016-04-25
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780226327990

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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.

Feeling the Future at Christian End Time Performances

Feeling the Future at Christian End Time Performances
Author: Jill C. Stevenson
Publsiher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 243
Release: 2022-02
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9780472132850

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How Christian depictions of the End allow spectators to experience--and feel--their place within the future history of humankind

Prismatic Performances

Prismatic Performances
Author: April Sizemore-Barber
Publsiher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 195
Release: 2020-09-28
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9780472132058

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At his 1994 inauguration, South African president Nelson Mandela announced the “Rainbow Nation, at peace with itself and the world.” This national rainbow notably extended beyond the bounds of racial coexistence and reconciliation to include “sexual orientation” as a protected category in the Bill of Rights. Yet despite the promise of equality and dignity, the new government’s alliance with neoliberal interests and the devastation of the AIDS epidemic left South Africa an increasingly unequal society. Prismatic Performances focuses on the queer embodiments that both reveal and animate the gaps between South Africa’s self-image and its lived realities. It argues that performance has become a key location where contradictions inherent to South Africa’s post-apartheid identity are negotiated. The book spans 30 years of cultural production and numerous social locations and includes: a team of black lesbian soccer players who reveal and redefine the gendered and sexed limitations of racialized “Africanness;” white gay performers who use drag and gender subversion to work through questions of racial and societal transformation; black artists across the arts who have developed aesthetics that place on display their audiences’ complicity in the problem of sexual violence; and a primarily heterosexual panAfrican online soap opera fandom community who, by combining new virtual spaces with old melodramatic tropes allow for extended deliberation and new paradigms through which African same-sex relationships are acceptable. Prismatic Performances contends that when explicitly queer bodies emerge onto public stages, audiences are made intimately aware of their own bodies’ identifications and desires. As the sheen of the New South Africa began to fade, these performances revealed the inadequacy and, indeed, the violence, of the Rainbow Nation as an aspirational metaphor. Simultaneously they created space for imagining new radical configurations of belonging.

Choreographing in Color

Choreographing in Color
Author: Assistant Professor of Global Asian Studies J Lorenzo Perillo,J. Lorenzo Perillo
Publsiher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2020-09-08
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9780190054274

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In Choreographing in Color, J. Lorenzo Perillo draws on nearly two decades of ethnography, choreographic analysis, and community engagement to ask: what does it mean for Filipinos to navigate violent forces of empire and neoliberalism with street dance and Hip-Hop?