Autor | |
Resumen |
In February 1856, the Illustrated London News published a wood-cut print of Sido Murmu, a captured leader of an anti-colonial rebellion in India led by indigenous Santal headmen. Known as the Hul, this movement has been re-visited by exponents of subaltern historiography in an effort to understand insurgent consciousness, and the parameters of ‘minority’ history. Working across these parameters, this article employs a visual and historical ethnographic methodology, in order to question whether the interplay between colonial-era and post-independence representations of the Hul may inform a new understanding both of British scopic regimes and of Santal (tribal) and Adivasi (Indigenous) assertion in India. The concept of ‘after-image’ is used metaphorically, to trace how a seemingly imperialist portrait of Sido Murmu has assumed multiple afterlives. I question how these afterlives intersect with the intangible heritage of the Hul especially in the new state of Jharkhand (eastern-central India), to generate an approach to heterotopian encounters that has applicability in both visual studies and subaltern studies. |
Año de publicación |
2011
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Revista académica |
Visual Culture in Britain
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Volumen |
12
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Número |
3
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Número de páginas |
367-386
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Publisher: Taylor and Francis Ltd.
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Idioma de edición |
English
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Numero ISSN |
14714787 (ISSN)
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URL |
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85044020421&doi=10.1080%2f14714787.2011.609398&partnerID=40&md5=68b4a1a3e937412f034e67870950c2d2
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DOI |
10.1080/14714787.2011.609398
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