Waving and Drowning: at the conjunction of contemporary British and Indian responses to a song by Rabindranath Tagore

Dorsett, Chris and Sasidharan Nair, Janaki (2016) Waving and Drowning: at the conjunction of contemporary British and Indian responses to a song by Rabindranath Tagore. In: SARI 2016 Annual and International Colloquium: Variations, Rewritings and Adaptations of the Jātaka Tales and Buddhism in India Today, 26-28 May 2016, Paris.

Full text not available from this repository. (Request a copy)

Abstract

This text is the final version of a paper given at Variations, Rewritings and Adaptations of the Jātaka Tales and Buddhism in India Today, SARI 2016 Annual and International Colloquium, University of Paris 13. In Paris, before an academic audience, everything we said centred on the screening of a video piece that mixed together our two fields of interest: the sculptural experiments shaping contemporary art (Dorsett) and the long-established traditions of Indian dance now informing multicultural performance practices (Nair). Every presentation we give together reflects a “practice-based” approach to the possibility of dialogue between current visual art practices in the UK and Kathakali theatre as it is still performed in southern India. Recently we have been working on a particularly beautiful song by the Bengali poet and composer Rabindranath Tagore entitled Hriday aamaar prakash holo. Our attempts at advancing knowledge in relation to this wonderful piece, apparently as resonant in Britain today as it was in India throughout the twentieth century, are always embodied within new creative works of our own. To then write up and publish these outcomes as we do now involves a further step, a “practice-led” development that untangles our thinking from our practical work and reconfigures the results in a more conventional academic format. In this way we can openly use theoretical literature to decode and decipher aspects of our projects which otherwise remain latent. Because the tacit dimensions of the video we screened do not figure in a textual debate, the sensation of hearing a slow cross-fade between different versions of the Tagore song requires something like jataka-style storytelling to explore the feelings involved. As a result, without further explanation, we will launch our essay with our own adaptation of a jataka tale. This one is known as the Power of Rumour.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Uncontrolled Keywords: Tantra, Jataka, Tagore, contemporary sculpture Kathakali theatre
Subjects: W900 Others in Creative Arts and Design
Department: Faculties > Arts, Design and Social Sciences > Arts
Depositing User: Becky Skoyles
Date Deposited: 01 Mar 2018 10:46
Last Modified: 11 Oct 2019 21:47
URI: http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/33528

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics