'Partisan Aesthetics explores art's entanglements with histories of war, famine, mass politics and displacements that marked late-colonial and postcolonial India. Introducing "partisan aesthetics" as a conceptual grid, the book identifies ways in which art became political through interactions with left-wing activism during the 1940s, and the afterlives of such interactions in post-independence India. Using an archive of artists and artist collectives working in Calcutta from these decades, Sanjukta Sunderason argues that artists became political not only as reporters, organizers and cadre of India's Communist Party, or socialist fellow travelers, but through shifting modes of political participations and dissociations. Unmooring questions of Indian modernism from its hitherto dominant harnesses to national or global affiliations, Sunderason activates, instead, distinctly locational histories that refract transnational currents. She analyzes largely unknown and dispersed archives—drawings, diaries, posters, periodicals, and pamphlets, alongside paintings and prints—and insists that art as archive is foundational to understanding modern art's socialist affiliations during India's long decolonization. By bringing together expanding fields of South Asian art, global modernisms, and Third World cultures, Partisan Aesthetics generates a new narrative that combines political history of Indian modernism, social history of postcolonial cultural criticism, and intellectual history of decolonization.' - from back cover 

Access level

Onsite

Location code
REF.SUS7
Language

English

Publication/Creation date

2020

No of pages

320

ISBN / ISSN

9781503612990

No of copies

1

Content type

monograph

Chapter headings

Introduction: Partisan Aesthetics: Configurations

PART I. Dialogues and Dissonances

"Political Potentiality": Jamini Roy and the Formations of Progressive Art Criticism

"As Agitator and Organizer": Socialist Realism and Artist-cadres of the Communist Party of India

"Concrete Contextuality": Realism and Its Discontents in the Art of the Calcutta Group

PART II. Postcolonial Displacements

"All the More Real for Not Being Preached": Forms and Futures of Socialist Art in Nehruvian India

"Revolution in the Tropics, Love in the Tropics": Arts of Displacement in the Post-colony

Postscript: Toward an Aesthetics of Decolonization

Partisan Aesthetics: Modern Art and India’s Long Decolonization
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Partisan Aesthetics: Modern Art and India’s Long Decolonization