Folklore, Public Sphere, and Civil SocietyM. D. Muthukumaraswamy, Molly Kaushal In the Indian context; papers presented at a symposium held at New Delhi in 2002. |
Contents
Discursive Space and the | 37 |
Writing Orality and | 92 |
The Devadasi Debate and the Public Sphere | 103 |
Physical Spaces as Public Spheres in Civil Society | 113 |
Chaupal as Multidimensional Public Space | 123 |
IndoTibet Trade Routes as Public Sphere | 138 |
Birth of an Alternative Cultural Space | 157 |
Tale of Tensions | 171 |
Satire and Civil Society in the | 177 |
From Religious | 225 |
Transmitting | 274 |
Folklore Changes | 285 |
The Public Sphere Folklore and Interactive | 303 |
Contributors | 313 |
Other editions - View all
Folklore, Public Sphere, and Civil Society M. D. Muthukumaraswamy,Molly Kaushal No preview available - 2004 |
Common terms and phrases
19th century artistic audience become Bengal Bhagvata Mela Bharmour Bhotias Bobbili brahmanical Burhdeva burrakatha caste centre characters chaupal Chho dance cinema house civil society cockfight colonial context created cultural deity Delhi Devadasi Dhola discourse dominant drama Durga Puja elite emergence epic episode expression festivals film folklore folklorists Gaddi Ganesha Garhwal genre goddess Habermas Henry Reed Hindu ibid identity ideological India interactive jangamkatha jatar Johar Kangla Kannada Kashmir Khwan-i Pur Nimat king Kolkata language Madras mahila mandal malfuz mandal Manipur masks Melattur modern narrative ôh@ôƒ oral organised paradigm participation Pattar performance play political popular public space public sphere Purulia Raja religious ritual role rural Santiniketan Seetal Sheikh Shiva singers Singh social song story structure style symbolic Tamil Telugu theatre Tibet Tibetan trade traditional transformation tribal Tulu Tulu Yakshagana Velcheru Vijaya village voice women worship written Yakshagana