The award-wapsi controversy in India and the politics of dance

IF 0.9 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Anurima Banerji
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT In 2015, a coalition of artists in India launched a protest against the ruling establishment, returning their awards to the government in response to a series of attacks on minorities and dissident thinkers that had remained unacknowledged or insufficiently condemned by the state. Known as “Award Wapsi” (award return’ in Hindi), this was notably the first artist action of its kind in independent India, with artmakers from diverse domains participating in it. However, dancers were notably missing from the scene of this historic non-violent action. Those artists most invested in the idea of movement abandoned the protest movement. Moreover, this controversy elicited a fierce backlash, with a group of pro-government artists coordinating a counter-protest against their rebelling peers, with dancers represented among the ranks of those supporting the state. This paper considers the absence of dancers from oppositional organizing, and the presence of dancers in movements allied with the ruling regime, to think about the changing perceptions of political activism and the place of the artist in contemporary Indian society.
印度的瓦普西奖争议和舞蹈政治
摘要2015年,印度的一个艺术家联盟发起了一场反对统治机构的抗议活动,将他们的奖项退还给政府,以回应一系列针对少数民族和持不同政见思想家的攻击,这些攻击一直没有得到国家的承认或谴责。这被称为“Award Wapsi”(印地语“Award return”),是独立的印度第一次有来自不同领域的艺术家参与的此类活动。然而,在这场历史性的非暴力活动中,舞者明显缺席。那些对运动理念投入最多的艺术家放弃了抗议运动。此外,这场争议引发了激烈的反弹,一群亲政府的艺术家协调了一场针对反叛同行的反抗议活动,舞者也加入了支持国家的行列。本文考虑了反对派组织中舞者的缺席,以及与统治政权结盟的运动中舞者的存在,以思考政治激进主义观念的变化以及艺术家在当代印度社会中的地位。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
59
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