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Interdisciplinarity in environmental research: Insights from 25 years of crossing boundaries
Venue: Centre for Contemporary Studies, IISC Speaker: Sharachchandra Lele
Course 1003: Reframing the Debate on ‘the Political’ (in the wake of the Financial Crisis)
Course Instructor: Swagato Sarkar/Session 1
Talk by Akshay Khanna
A State of Arousal: Eroticism and Violence in the making of Homophobia
Production of Knowledge in the Natural and Social Sciences
Inaugural session and introductory module: Prof. Tejaswini Niranjana (CSCS) and Prof. Sanil V (IIT Delhi)
Course 1001: The Knowledge Society: Limits and Possibilities
Course Instructors: CSCS faculty, anchored by Dr. Sitharamam Kakarala/ Session 1
NIAS Graduate Seminar with Dr. Vinay Gidwani: Class 1
The Origins of Modernity
Course 1003: Reframing the Debate on ‘the Political’ (in the wake of the Financial Crisis)
Course Instructor: Swagato Sarkar/Session 2
Workshop on Introduction to History and Philosophy of Science
Integrated Science Education Initiative of the HE Cell in collaboration with IISER-Pune presents a three day workshop on Introduction to History and Philosophy of Science, a Second Year UG course for students of IISER-Pune. Instructor: K. Subramaniam
NIAS Graduate Seminar with Dr. Vinay Gidwani: Class 2
Development
NIAS Graduate Seminar with Dr. Vinay Gidwani: Class 3
Late Capitalism
Seminar on the Anthropology of Contemporary Capitalism
Session 1
Course 1001: The Knowledge Society: Limits and Possibilities
Course Instructors: CSCS faculty, anchored by Dr. Sitharamam Kakarala/ Session 2
Workshop on 'Psychobiography as Methodology' (CUSP@CSCS in collaboration with School of Human Studies, AUD)
Coordinators: P.Radhika/Asha Achuthan/Ranjita Biswas/Anup Dhar Venue: School of Human Studies, Ambedkar University, Delhi (as part of ICSSR project on The Experience of Gendered Violence: Developing Psychobiographies)
Ashish Rajadhyaksha
Work-in-Progress
Course 1003: Reframing the Debate on ‘the Political’ (in the wake of the Financial Crisis)
Course Instructor: Swagato Sarkar/Session 3
Workshop
Higher Education Cell/Venue: IISc
Course 1001: The Knowledge Society: Limits and Possibilities
Course Instructors: CSCS faculty, anchored by Dr. Sitharamam Kakarala/ Session 3
Tejaswini Niranjana
Work-in-Progress
Course 1003: Reframing the Debate on ‘the Political’ (in the wake of the Financial Crisis)
Course Instructor: Swagato Sarkar/Session 4
Talk by Rounaq Jahan
Challenges of Democratic Consolidation in Bangladesh
Presentation by CCS/CSCS Library Fellows
Venue: CCS
Course 1002: Personal Identification, Appearance and Politics
Course Instructor: Sruti Chaganti/Session 1
Workshop on Gender and Religion
Promoting Pluralism project of the Law, Society and Culture Programme
Course 1001: The Knowledge Society: Limits and Possibilities
Course Instructors: CSCS faculty, anchored by Dr. Sitharamam Kakarala/ Session 4
Fellowships at CSCS
The CSCS Fellowships Programme began in 2002 to make its substantial library and faculty resources available to a range of researchers outside the institution.
Visiting Fellows
CSCS provides affiliation to Indian and international researchers for varying periods of time. In addition CSCS also invites academics to interact with faculty and students and to present their work at the Centre.
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Current State: Published
Indian Cinema in the Time of Celluloid: From Bollywood to the Emergency
Ashish Rajadhyaksha (New Delhi: Tulika, 2009)
Nowhere has the cinema made more foundational a public intervention than in India, and yet the Indian cinema is consistently presented as something of an exception to world film history. What if, this book asks, film history was instead written from the Indian experience?
Indian Cinema in the Time of Celluloid reconstructs an era of film that saw an unprecedented public visibility attached to the moving image and to its social usage. The cinema was not invented by celluloid, nor will it die with celluloid’s growing obsolescence. But ‘celluloid’ names a distinct era in cinema’s career that coincides with a particular construct of the twentieth-century state. This is not merely a coincidence: the very raison d’etre of celluloid was derived from the use to which the modern state put it, as the authorized technology through which the state spoke and as narrative practices endorsing its authority as producer of the rational subject.
Arguing that there was a ‘spectatorial pact” around the attribution of state authority to the celluloid apparatus, Indian Cinema in the Time of Celluloid explores the circumstances under which social practices surrounding the celluloid experience also included political negotiations over its authority. While modern states everywhere have put the cinema to varied and by now familiar uses, in India we had the politicization of key tenets associated with the apparatus itself.
Indian cinema throws significant new light on the uses to which canonical concepts such as realism could be put, and on the frontiers at which cinematic narrative could operate.
The book throws new light on a phenomenon that is arguably basic to all cinema, but which India’s cinematic evidence throws into sharpest relief: the narrative simulation of a symbolically sanctified rationality at the behest of a state. This evidence is explored through three key moments of serious crisis for the twentieth-century Indian state, in all of which the cinema appears to have played a central role. Bollywood saw Indian cinema herald a globalized culture industry considerably larger than its own financial worth, and a major presence in India’s brief claim to financial superpower status. The debate on Fire centrally located spectatorial negotiations around the constitutional right to freedom of speech at a key moment in modern Indian history when Article 19 was under attack from pro-Hindutva forces. And the Emergency (1975-77) saw a New Indian Cinema politically united against totalitarian rule but nevertheless rent asunder by disputes over realism, throwing up new questions around the formation of an epochal moment in independent India.
http://www.scholarswithoutborders.in/item_show.php?code_no=FST042&ID=undefined&calcStr=
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