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BAULS (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   124975


Intercultural synthesis, radical humanism and rabindranritya: re-evaluation of Tagore's dance legacy / Chakravorty, Pallabi   Journal Article
Chakravorty, Pallabi Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Rabindranath Tagore imbued Indian dance and music with a new modern sensibility. He created novel and eclectic dance-and-music genres, Rabindranritya and Rabindrasangeet, when the national trend was toward classical revivalism. He inspired Indian women to dance on the national stage at a time when dance was associated with immorality and cultural degeneration. This article explores Tagore's song and dance creations, connecting them to his radical political and philosophical thought on universal humanism. Focusing on his views on creativity and freedom, nationalism and cosmopolitanism, and women and essentialism, it is argued that this eclectic intercultural synthesis of ideas served to promote individual consciousness, empowerment and cosmopolitanism without rejecting their Indic cultural roots.
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2
ID:   112741


Mystic rites for permanent class conflict: the bauls Of Bengal, revolutionary ideology and post-capitalism / Ferrari, Fabrizio M   Journal Article
Ferrari, Fabrizio M Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Locating itself amidst current debates on post-modern analyses of mysticism, particularly academic debates on the Bauls of Bengal, this article discusses issues of cultural transformation as a result of gentrification and globalisation. It combines the author's ethnographic research and a methodology mainly derived from Italian Marxist critique (Antonio Gramsci, Ernesto de Martino, Antonio Negri and Paolo Virno). The article examines the reification of mysticism and the process of 'rehab', as imposed by Bengali bourgeoisie via the Tagorian archetype and the Western show business on the Bauls, to cleanse their image from inconvenient traits. Suggesting an interpretation of radical materialist mystics as 'multitude' and viewing professional Bauls as 'people', this research explores how the construction of a myth has ultimately penetrated contemporary society at all levels, including academic circles.
Key Words Philosophy  Bengal  People  Bauls  Folklore  Italian Marxism 
Marxist Critique  Multitude  Mysticism  Post - Capitalism 
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