In Defence of the Ordinary: Everyday Awakenings
Autor Dev Nath Pathaken Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 iul 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789390358175
ISBN-10: 9390358175
Pagini: 276
Dimensiuni: 135 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic India
Locul publicării:New Delhi, India
ISBN-10: 9390358175
Pagini: 276
Dimensiuni: 135 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic India
Locul publicării:New Delhi, India
Caracteristici
Includes 25 essays dipped in light humour, serious sarcasm, poetic polemics, and suggestive propositions on a wide range of aspects related to ordinariness
Notă biografică
Dev Nath Pathak teaches Sociology at South Asian University and is a founding faculty member of the university's Department of Sociology. His current research interests include popular culture (music, cinema and performance) and South Asian studies.
Cuprins
Preface: Off and On Stage Embryonic Intrigues: On Something and Nothing1 A Defence of the Ordinary, or Wishful Thinking 2 Seeing, Ordinarily, the Seen and Unseen When There Was Nothing3 Lullaby, Tales and Play in the Kindergarten 4 Anger, Love and Intersections: A Scheme of Ordinary Emotions5 Lotus, Mud and Fear of a Sex Beast 6 Jokes, Abuse, Friends, Enemies and Something Called In-laws 7 Defiance, Rebellion and Protest: From Embryo to Artificial Intelligence There Was Something8 Flirtatious, Lustful and Committed: An Ordinary Romance 9 Match, Friendship and Marriage: Looking for Romance 10 The Teacher, the Taught and Traditions: A Dream Lost11 I Am Nothing, Just a Teacher: A Dream Found12 Not the Owls of Minerva: Teachers in Higher Education!13 Mundane Divinity, Rigid Religiosity and Everything Trivial14 Ordinary Gandhi in the Time of Extraordinary Gau-Raksha Cacophony of Celebration?15 Awry October, Fury of Festivity and Destruction of Virtues 16 No Ram in the Rant 17 Blissful and Blasé: Tourism versus Pilgrimage18 Models without Roles! 19 Our Ordinary Amitabh Bachchan: Politics, Prejudice and Pride20 Gandhi, Nehru and the Politics of Extraordinary Names 21 Vernacular Cannibalism: When a Big Language Monster Eats Up Smaller Ones22 Spectacles of Success and FailureThou Shall Be There, Nonetheless23 Ordinary Art and the Quest for Distorted Icons 24 Lost and Found, Friends and Enemies, Buried in Ordinary Trousseau25 Living and Dying, Medicine and Songs, and Folk PhilosophyIndexAbout the Author
Recenzii
This book neither ascends nor descends into the ordinary. Instead, it accesses and exceeds the everyday. Dev Nath Pathak scrabbles and scrambles the personal as the public, the routine as the transgressive, the affective as the constant, the image as the immanent, the vernacular as the cosmopolitan, the word as the world and vice-versa. A haunting work intimating spectral challenges-across the ruins we inhabit.
Taking clues from personal experiences, folklore, classical epics, literature and cinema and of course academic discourses, the author of these essays delves into a range of emotions with the objective to awaken the dormant potential of emancipation every day rather than waiting for an occasional charisma induced by a holy book or a secular gimmick. The book encompasses everyday situations and "ordinary" (hence universal) experiences of life, including the ultimate and inevitable one-death, and tries to take the reader along on this journey of reflection. The result is a delightfully composed prose with interesting insights.
What is a book? It is assumed to have certain universally shared features such as structured thoughts, formalised expression while respecting the rules of consistency and coherence. By their very nature, these features undermine the authenticity of ordinary human experiences and do injustice to their fluidity and richness. How then should a book be defined and written? This fascinating book provides one answer and exemplifies it through practice. It is full of insights and will repay close study.
In Defence of the Ordinary is a book that will appeal to a wide range of readers. It covers a wide range of subjects, all of which touch upon author's life and experiences as a teacher, scholar, husband, father andson(-in-law). He brings his experience as a sociologist and his work on folklore to the text in a way that is lively and interesting.
A splendid work of art, In Defence of Ordinary returns drama, pleasure and awakening to everyday life. It takes us on an ambitious but quiet journey, through poetry, politics, philosophy, religion, livelihoods and everyday encounters between selves, others, gods and things, in the tradition of cultural critics like Ashis Nandy and Umberto Eco. It risks academic protocols and disciplinary boundaries, and with great courage cuts through the division between thought and life that plagues modern academia. The book is one of a kind.
In this fascinating collection of essays, Dev Nath Pathak explores a wide range of questions related to ordinariness. A flâneur of our everyday spheres of life, he excavates the multiple layers of social, political and artistic thinking and experimentation of the Indian society with an unparalleled lightness of prose worthy of a Baltasar Gracián and Georg Lichtenberg.
This book is a reflective and joyous celebration of the ordinary. Drawing on diverse examples of everyday life, from dealing with babies to more weighty issues around love, the book builds an engaging web ofthoughts about things which are ordinary but in their very ordinariness hide deep social truths. Using examples from commonly enjoyed music, stories and films, Pathak brings a lightness to his critical eye while reminding us how much of the ordinary has been forgotten in academic pursuits.
From cosmic continuities to the unanticipated and incessant interruption of everyday life, the "ordinary" is both a shifting terrain of inquisitiveness, inclination and an anchor in the volatility of human relations with the earth. Dev Nath Pathak speaks to us from the middle of these things, unafraid of muddying the waters with reflections that intertwine his inordinate knowledge of Indian philosophy, cinema and storytelling with improvised ruminations on everything-fatherly play, compassionate lust, youthful disagreements, friendship, journeying and fandom. Throughout, there is the pursuit of the sensuousness of teaching, of what it means to convey and impart in an implicit critique of how corporate education has become, how easy it is to defy authority and how sharing and equanimity can be demonstrated in multiple encounters not needing a classroom. There is a resounding surfeit of liveliness in all of these "parables", a sense of really being alive as something accessible to everyone no matter how difficult their situation or how commodified and performance-oriented living has become.
Taking clues from personal experiences, folklore, classical epics, literature and cinema and of course academic discourses, the author of these essays delves into a range of emotions with the objective to awaken the dormant potential of emancipation every day rather than waiting for an occasional charisma induced by a holy book or a secular gimmick. The book encompasses everyday situations and "ordinary" (hence universal) experiences of life, including the ultimate and inevitable one-death, and tries to take the reader along on this journey of reflection. The result is a delightfully composed prose with interesting insights.
What is a book? It is assumed to have certain universally shared features such as structured thoughts, formalised expression while respecting the rules of consistency and coherence. By their very nature, these features undermine the authenticity of ordinary human experiences and do injustice to their fluidity and richness. How then should a book be defined and written? This fascinating book provides one answer and exemplifies it through practice. It is full of insights and will repay close study.
In Defence of the Ordinary is a book that will appeal to a wide range of readers. It covers a wide range of subjects, all of which touch upon author's life and experiences as a teacher, scholar, husband, father andson(-in-law). He brings his experience as a sociologist and his work on folklore to the text in a way that is lively and interesting.
A splendid work of art, In Defence of Ordinary returns drama, pleasure and awakening to everyday life. It takes us on an ambitious but quiet journey, through poetry, politics, philosophy, religion, livelihoods and everyday encounters between selves, others, gods and things, in the tradition of cultural critics like Ashis Nandy and Umberto Eco. It risks academic protocols and disciplinary boundaries, and with great courage cuts through the division between thought and life that plagues modern academia. The book is one of a kind.
In this fascinating collection of essays, Dev Nath Pathak explores a wide range of questions related to ordinariness. A flâneur of our everyday spheres of life, he excavates the multiple layers of social, political and artistic thinking and experimentation of the Indian society with an unparalleled lightness of prose worthy of a Baltasar Gracián and Georg Lichtenberg.
This book is a reflective and joyous celebration of the ordinary. Drawing on diverse examples of everyday life, from dealing with babies to more weighty issues around love, the book builds an engaging web ofthoughts about things which are ordinary but in their very ordinariness hide deep social truths. Using examples from commonly enjoyed music, stories and films, Pathak brings a lightness to his critical eye while reminding us how much of the ordinary has been forgotten in academic pursuits.
From cosmic continuities to the unanticipated and incessant interruption of everyday life, the "ordinary" is both a shifting terrain of inquisitiveness, inclination and an anchor in the volatility of human relations with the earth. Dev Nath Pathak speaks to us from the middle of these things, unafraid of muddying the waters with reflections that intertwine his inordinate knowledge of Indian philosophy, cinema and storytelling with improvised ruminations on everything-fatherly play, compassionate lust, youthful disagreements, friendship, journeying and fandom. Throughout, there is the pursuit of the sensuousness of teaching, of what it means to convey and impart in an implicit critique of how corporate education has become, how easy it is to defy authority and how sharing and equanimity can be demonstrated in multiple encounters not needing a classroom. There is a resounding surfeit of liveliness in all of these "parables", a sense of really being alive as something accessible to everyone no matter how difficult their situation or how commodified and performance-oriented living has become.