資料來源: Google Book
Sweating saris :Indian dance as transnational labor
- 作者: Srinivasan, Priya,
- 出版: Philadelphia : Temple University Press 2011.
- 稽核項: xvi, 221 p. :ill. ;23 cm.
- 標題: East Indians United States -- Ethnic identity. , Foreign workers, East Indian United States -- Social conditions. , Women dancers , Women dancers India -- Social conditions. , Foreign workers, East Indian , Dance , Social conditions. , Bharata natyam Social aspects -- United States. , East Indians , Social aspects , Bharata natyam , Dance Social aspects -- India. , Women dancers United States -- Social conditions. , Ethnic identity. , Dance Social aspects -- United States.
- ISBN: 1439904316 , 9781439904312
- 附註: 100年度教育部購置教學研究相關圖書儀器及設備計畫. Includes bibliographical references (p. [201]-211) and index. Performing ethnographic failure -- Transnational hauntings of the oriental dancing girl -- St. Denis and the Nachwalis -- Entering the archive -- Between 1924 and 1965 Immigration Acts -- Negotiating cultural nationalism and minority citizenship -- Manufacturing of the Indian dancer through off-shore labor.
- 系統號: 005063436
- 資料類型: 圖書
- 讀者標籤: 需登入
- 引用網址: 複製連結
A groundbreaking book that seeks to understand dance as labor, Sweating Saris examines dancers not just as aesthetic bodies but as transnational migrant workers and wage earners who negotiate citizenship and gender issues. Srinivasan merges ethnography, history, critical race theory, performance and post-colonial studies among other disciplines to investigate the embodied experience of Indian dance. The dancers’ sweat stained and soaked saris, the aching limbs are emblematic of global circulations of labor, bodies, capital, and industrial goods. Thus the sweating sari of the dancer stands in for her unrecognized labor. Srinivasan shifts away from the usual emphasis on Indian women dancers as culture bearers of the Indian nation. She asks us to reframe the movements of late nineteenth century transnational Nautch Indian dancers to the foremother of modern dance Ruth St. Denis in the early twentieth century to contemporary teenage dancers in Southern California, proposing a transformative theory of dance, gendered-labor, and citizenship that is far-reaching.
來源: Google Book
來源: Google Book
評分