ABSTRACT

This edited volume considers performance in its engagement with expanding Indian cities, with a particular focus on festivals and performances in Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala.

The editors ask how performance practices are affected by urbanisation, the effects of such changes on their cultural economy, and the environmental impacts of performance itself. This project also considers how performance responds to its context, and the potential for performance to be critical of the city’s development, and of its own compromises. Bringing together perspectives from the humanities, natural and social sciences, the book takes a multi-faceted analytical view of live performance, connecting contemporary with heritage forms, and human with more-than-human actors.

The three sections, themed around heritage, everyday life, and future ecologies, will be of great interest to students and scholars in performance, heritage studies, ecology and art history.

chapter 1|20 pages

The spaces of everyday performance

chapter Photo essay 1|6 pages

Maha Shivaratri, 2018

A journey through Bengaluru

part one|70 pages

Heritage

chapter 2|19 pages

Crossing thresholds

Transgressing space, identity and performance in the Urur–Olcott Kuppam Vizha in Chennai

chapter 3|22 pages

Performing craft, crafting performance

From the tangible to intangible in craft and performance heritage

chapter Photo essay 2|6 pages

Heritage performances at Tripunithura

part two|66 pages

Everyday life

chapter 7|21 pages

Performing the digital city

Flash mob performance and social exclusion in Bengaluru's ‘new’ India

chapter Photo essay 3|6 pages

Fermented frontier

Between north and south

part three|67 pages

Environment

chapter 8|12 pages

Musings from the Vrishchikotsavam of Tripunithura

The uncertain future of the performing temple elephants of Kerala

chapter 9|21 pages

Primate performances in a contact zone

Interspecies communication and benefaction in a synurbising forest of southern India

chapter Photo essay 4|8 pages

On the threshold of Urur Kuppam