Gods in the bazaar : the economies of Indian calendar art
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Gods in the bazaar : the economies of Indian calendar art
(Objects/histories)
Duke University Press, 2007
- : pbk
Available at 2 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [409]-425) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Gods in the Bazaar is a fascinating account of the printed images known in India as "calendar art" or "bazaar art," the color-saturated, mass-produced pictures often used on calendars and in advertisements, featuring deities and other religious themes as well as nationalist leaders, alluring women, movie stars, chubby babies, and landscapes. Calendar art appears in all manner of contexts in India: in chic elite living rooms, middle-class kitchens, urban slums, village huts; hung on walls, stuck on scooters and computers, propped up on machines, affixed to dashboards, tucked into wallets and lockets. In this beautifully illustrated book, Kajri Jain examines the power that calendar art wields in Indian mass culture, arguing that its meanings derive as much from the production and circulation of the images as from their visual features. Jain draws on interviews with artists, printers, publishers, and consumers as well as analyses of the prints themselves to trace the economies-of art, commerce, religion, and desire-within which calendar images and ideas about them are formulated. For Jain, an analysis of the bazaar, or vernacular commercial arena, is crucial to understanding not only the calendar art that circulates within the bazaar but also India's postcolonial modernity and the ways that its mass culture has developed in close connection with a religiously inflected nationalism. The bazaar is characterized by the coexistence of seemingly incompatible elements: bourgeois-liberal and neoliberal modernism on the one hand, and vernacular discourses and practices on the other. Jain argues that from the colonial era to the present, capitalist expansion has depended on the maintenance of these multiple coexisting realms: the sacred, the commercial, and the artistic; the official and the vernacular.
Table of Contents
Notes on Style vii
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: Calendar Art as an Object of Knowledge 1
Part 1. Genealogy
1. Vernacularizing Capitalism: Sivakasi and Its Circuits 31
2. When the Gods Go to Market 77
3. Naturalizing the Popular 115
Part 2. Economy
4. The Sacred Icon in the Age of the Work of Art and Mechanical Reproduction 171
5. The Circulation of Images and the Embodiment of Value 217
Part 3. Efficacy
6. The Efficacious Image and the Sacralization of Modernity 269
7. Flexing the Canon 315
Conclusion 355
Notes 375
Works Cited 409
Index 427
by "Nielsen BookData"