Locating Pleasure in Indian History: Prescribed and Proscribed Desires in Visual and Literary Cultures
By (Author) Seema Bawa
Bloomsbury India
Bloomsbury Academic India
26th September 2021
India
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Asian history
Social and cultural history
History of art
Hardback
308
Width 135mm, Height 216mm
498g
Locating Pleasure in Indian History is one of the first works on the subject of the discourse of pleasure in Indian history and culture. A rigorous, source-based work, it examines the cultural practices and the underlying philosophic matrix of pleasures, big or small. It recovers the production and consumption of beauty, desire and gratification in the world of pleasure, pleasurable pursuits and pleasant experiences of viewing, performing, thinking, debating, cooking, eating, listening, writing, creating and procreating. The contributions retrieve the discourse of pleasure in visual and literary culturesin elite and popular spheres, including the public and private domains of the bazaar, the temple, the household, the court and the garden. Further, it is examined in the urbane art of Mathura, Ravanas palace in the art of 7th CE western Deccan, the suratkhana of Rajput royalty or domestic pleasures of women in the labyrinths of the Puranas. With over 40 photographs, it historicises ideological and experiential conundrums thrown up by the idea of pursuing alimentary, carnal and even pious desires in visual and literary cultures. The reflexivity inherent in the work of artists, poets, dramatists and even shastrins is brought out through moments of pleasure and counter-pleasure as revealed through anecdotes, narratives, artefacts and objects of aesthetic gratification.
Seema Bawa is Professor at the Department of History, University of Delhi. She specialises in History of South Asian Art and Culture.