Acts of Seeing, Ways of Knowing: Visual Culture in the Making of Modern India by Sandria B. Freitag

Acts of Seeing, Ways of Knowing: Visual Culture in the Making of Modern India

AUTHOR- Sandria B. Freitag

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INFORMATION

  • AUTHOR : Sandria B. Freitag
  • HB ISBN : 978-93-6627-188-0
  • Year : 2025
  • Extent : 436
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Acts of Seeing, Ways of Knowing refracts the nineteenth and twentieth centuries history of India through reception of the first two ‘mass’ forms of visual culture, photography and posters (those with the capacity to produce multiple copies).  India’s responses to a changing public world are revealed, intriguingly, through this visual-culture repertoire.  Production and consumption of these material objects revolve especially around visual culture’s capacity to prompt and express identity-narratives that draw on the nexus of a dramatic expansion of consumption practices with individual efforts to construct meaning by collecting, displaying, designing, and interacting with mass-produced materials. They emerge as markers of those intending to be good, modern, citizens, who are drawn, significantly, from both middle- and lower-class/caste participants.

 

It is an important aspect of such interactions that these visuals begin as ‘mass-produced’ items.  Paradoxically, perhaps, this means that such items though in multiples, provide new kinds of evidence, revealing how visual culture could express both collective and individual values in response to the challenges of change from the mid-nineteenth through the twentieth century. In particular, this study emphasizes ‘doing’, designed to distinguish sharply interactions between viewers and materials involving social action, from linguistic or semiotic interpretations, with such social action constituting meaning-making by those who view and consume these materials.

The Author

Sandria B. Freitag teaches History at North Carolina State University, and received her PhD from the University of California-Berkeley. She has long explored a range of source materials to answer new questions about ordinary people in Indian society (ranging from criminality to public-space activities), and tracing change from the British period into the twenty-first century.  Her current study of the first two ‘mass’-produced and -consumed forms of visual culture, situated at the intersection of everyday life and historical change, reflects essays now being published on ‘the public’ and the place of crafts in India’s philanthropic world. Her earlier work included Community and Collective Action (1989) as well as several edited essay collections, ranging from Culture and Power in Banaras (1989) through a special issue of Journal of South Asia (on the Public in South Asia, 1991), to The Visual Turn in South Asian Studies (2015), along with several essays in journals, encyclopedias, and volumes edited by other scholars.