ABSTRACT

This unique work is an annotated collection and collation of Western writing on Indian dance from the period of Marco Polo’s travels to India to the formulation of the anti-devadasi bill in 1930, and a little beyond. The book reproduces more than 250 extracts from important texts, which provide examples of how dance in India was perceived as an art, as well its position in the broader cultural, religious, social, and ethical environment. Though some excerpts from these texts are cited in other writings on Indian dance history, there is no other available work that reproduces such a large number of historical writings on Indian dance and places them in a fluid historical context.

chapter Chapter 1|20 pages

Prelude: 1298–1711

chapter Chapter 3|29 pages

Writings from the Bengal Presidency: 1813–1837

chapter Chapter 4|36 pages

The Decade of Encounter: 1830–1840

chapter Chapter 7|43 pages

Getting to Grips with the Bayadère: 1860–1870

chapter Chapter 8|36 pages

A Royal Performance and Other Perceptions: 1870–1880

chapter Chapter 9|38 pages

A Slowly Brewing Storm: 1880–1890

chapter Chapter 11|59 pages

Dancing in India in the Storm of Reform: 1890—1900

chapter Chapter 13|40 pages

A Decade of Contradiction and Appropriation: 1910–1920

chapter Chapter 14|58 pages

The Beginning of the End: 1920–1930

chapter |18 pages

Postscript