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Publication subTitle :A Social History of Mizoram, Northeast India
Author: Joy L. K. Pachuau;Willem van Schendel;
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication year: 2015
E-ISBN: 9781316915066
P-ISBN(Paperback): 9781107073395
P-ISBN(Hardback): 9781107073395
Subject: K351.9 local annals
Keyword: 亚洲史
Language: ENG
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The Camera as Witness
Description
The book challenges the stereotypes about and narrates the daily lives of the Mizos through the use of vernacular photography. Northeast India has for long been classified as remote, exotic and underdeveloped, and has been denied significant attention. This book invests focus where it is due, chronicling the fascinating history of the Mizos through vernacular photography. It brings together the questions of identity formation, nation and global cultures. Northeast India has for long been classified as remote, exotic and underdeveloped, and has been denied significant attention. This book invests focus where it is due, chronicling the fascinating history of the Mizos through vernacular photography. It brings together the questions of identity formation, nation and global cultures. The Camera as Witness lifts the veil off the little known world of Mizoram and challenges - through unpublished photographs - core assumptions in the writing of India's national history. The pictures in the book establish the transformation of this society and the many forms of modernity that have emerged in it. It emphasises how 'indigenous people' in Mizoram used cameras to produce distinct modern identities and represent themselves to themselves, consistently contesting outsiders' imaginations of them as isolated, backward and in need of upliftment. The authors demonstrate how mostly amateur photographers used visual images to document a historical trajectory of heady change and continual reinvention, producing distinct modern identities. By virtue of its use of visual sources and its engagement with a wide range of important discourses, this book is relevant for students, historians, social scientists, political activists and general readers looking for a fresh approach to Northeast India. List of figures; List of maps; Glossary; Acknowledgements; Part I. Becoming Mizo: 1. Introduction; 2. Coming into view: the first images; 3. Adjusting Mizo culture; 4. Domesticating a new religion; 5. Getting educated; 6. Controlling the hills; 7. The trouble of travel; 8. First stirrings of the market economy; 9. Mizos in the World Wars; 10. Mizo visual sensibilities; Part II. Mizoram in the New India: 11. The long goodbye; 12. The emergence of popular politics; 13. Mizoram and the new Indian order; 14. Mizoram comes to Delhi; 15. The search for authenticity at home; 16. Mizo style: cowboys at heart; Part III. Visions of Independence: 17. Famine and revolt; 18. The Mizoram government at home – and in East Pakistan; 19. The Mizoram government – in Burma, China and Bangladesh; 20. A state and its minorities; Part IV. Mizo Modernities: 21. Being cool: the music scene; 22. Being cool: sharp dressers; 23. Studio modernity; 24. Conclusion; Acknowledgement of copyrights and sources; Bibliography; Index.
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