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Dancer from the dance: Shobana Jeyasingh’s empowered hybrid woman

This thesis investigates the representation of female emancipation through the complex interaction between the Bharata Natyam performer’s dancing body and the postmodern and postcolonial space that the diasporic Indian woman occupies in Britain. Beginning with an examination concerning the historica...

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Main Author: Shezad A. Khalil
Format: Default Thesis
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/33038
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author Shezad A. Khalil
author_facet Shezad A. Khalil
author_sort Shezad A. Khalil (7146341)
collection Figshare
description This thesis investigates the representation of female emancipation through the complex interaction between the Bharata Natyam performer’s dancing body and the postmodern and postcolonial space that the diasporic Indian woman occupies in Britain. Beginning with an examination concerning the historical rise of the female Bharata Natyam performer, this discourse provides a contextual and analytical framework for the critical exploration of Shobana Jeyasingh’s contemporary choreography. The intention of this is to recognise that throughout antiquity, and as mentioned in several historical and religious Hindu texts, the South Asian woman has been responsible for articulating a vocabulary that assisted in elevating the status of the female Bharata Natyam dancer. This work also considers the decline of the female Bharata Natyam performer, as seen in 1892 through the “interference” of the coloniser and how this, in a curious subversion, gave rise to the rebirth of a dying art by female dance practitioners as Tanjore Balasaraswati (1918-84) and Rukmini Devi (1904-86). Further, this section investigates the influence of gender identity and the identity of the Indian nation through the efforts of the women mentioned above and how they were concerned in exalting the position of the female performer. Drawing upon this contextual scaffolding, the second half of the thesis explores Jeyasingh’s biographical narratives and questions how her migratory journeys are replicated in her contemporary arrangements. Through an examination of these constructions, the thesis explores Jeyasingh’s representation of the female migrant as positioned “inside” the geo-cultural boundaries of Britain and how her and her daughter’s or daughters’ identities denote a modification to Bharata Natyam. The compositions analysed range from Jeyasingh’s Making of Maps, from 1992, to more recent arrangements like Faultline, staged in 2007. Finally, the thesis attempts to contribute to the academic discourse through its discussion of how the diasporic female dancer exhibits an empowered hybrid vocabulary that is associated with both the “past” and “present”.
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spelling rr-article-93261532018-01-01T00:00:00Z Dancer from the dance: Shobana Jeyasingh’s empowered hybrid woman Shezad A. Khalil (7146341) Other creative arts and writing not elsewhere classified Jeyasingh, Shobana Natyam, Bharata Classical dance Identity Hybridity Diaspora Migration Great Britain India Female empowerment Studies in the Creative Arts and Writing not elsewhere classified <p>This thesis investigates the representation of female emancipation through the complex interaction between the Bharata Natyam performer’s dancing body and the postmodern and postcolonial space that the diasporic Indian woman occupies in Britain. Beginning with an examination concerning the historical rise of the female Bharata Natyam performer, this discourse provides a contextual and analytical framework for the critical exploration of Shobana Jeyasingh’s contemporary choreography. The intention of this is to recognise that throughout antiquity, and as mentioned in several historical and religious Hindu texts, the South Asian woman has been responsible for articulating a vocabulary that assisted in elevating the status of the female Bharata Natyam dancer. This work also considers the decline of the female Bharata Natyam performer, as seen in 1892 through the “interference” of the coloniser and how this, in a curious subversion, gave rise to the rebirth of a dying art by female dance practitioners as Tanjore Balasaraswati (1918-84) and Rukmini Devi (1904-86). Further, this section investigates the influence of gender identity and the identity of the Indian nation through the efforts of the women mentioned above and how they were concerned in exalting the position of the female performer.</p> <p>Drawing upon this contextual scaffolding, the second half of the thesis explores Jeyasingh’s biographical narratives and questions how her migratory journeys are replicated in her contemporary arrangements. Through an examination of these constructions, the thesis explores Jeyasingh’s representation of the female migrant as positioned “inside” the geo-cultural boundaries of Britain and how her and her daughter’s or daughters’ identities denote a modification to Bharata Natyam. The compositions analysed range from Jeyasingh’s Making of Maps, from 1992, to more recent arrangements like Faultline, staged in 2007. Finally, the thesis attempts to contribute to the academic discourse through its discussion of how the diasporic female dancer exhibits an empowered hybrid vocabulary that is associated with both the “past” and “present”.</p> 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z Text Thesis 2134/33038 https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Dancer_from_the_dance_Shobana_Jeyasingh_s_empowered_hybrid_woman/9326153 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
spellingShingle Other creative arts and writing not elsewhere classified
Jeyasingh, Shobana
Natyam, Bharata
Classical dance
Identity
Hybridity
Diaspora
Migration
Great Britain
India
Female empowerment
Studies in the Creative Arts and Writing not elsewhere classified
Shezad A. Khalil
Dancer from the dance: Shobana Jeyasingh’s empowered hybrid woman
title Dancer from the dance: Shobana Jeyasingh’s empowered hybrid woman
title_full Dancer from the dance: Shobana Jeyasingh’s empowered hybrid woman
title_fullStr Dancer from the dance: Shobana Jeyasingh’s empowered hybrid woman
title_full_unstemmed Dancer from the dance: Shobana Jeyasingh’s empowered hybrid woman
title_short Dancer from the dance: Shobana Jeyasingh’s empowered hybrid woman
title_sort dancer from the dance: shobana jeyasingh’s empowered hybrid woman
topic Other creative arts and writing not elsewhere classified
Jeyasingh, Shobana
Natyam, Bharata
Classical dance
Identity
Hybridity
Diaspora
Migration
Great Britain
India
Female empowerment
Studies in the Creative Arts and Writing not elsewhere classified
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/33038