New Books in Anthropology

Rumya Sree Putcha, "The Dancer's Voice: Performance and Womanhood in Transnational India" (Duke UP, 2022)

Dec 22, 2022
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Episode notes
1
Introduction
00:00 • 2min
2
How Did You Get Into Ethnomusicology?
01:49 • 3min
3
What's the Story of the Book?
05:04 • 3min
4
How Do You Confront the Categorization of Your Work as an Autorenographic?
08:01 • 3min
5
Is Auto Ethnography a Real Thing?
11:00 • 3min
6
How Do You Engage With Corporeal Aesthetics of Being a Dancer?
14:21 • 6min
7
Sundaram Is Like a Ghost in My Life
19:57 • 6min
8
The Dancer's Voice
25:28 • 1min
9
The Dancer Is a Symbol of Visual and Racialized Beauty
26:46 • 6min
10
The Sound of the Gajalu in the Recording Booth
32:33 • 3min
11
You Don't Only Hear With Your Ears
35:04 • 2min
12
The Original Dancer's Voice
36:43 • 2min
13
A Woman's Body Is Always on Display
38:23 • 2min
14
The Desire for Happiness Is What Brings Many Women to Dance
40:33 • 3min
15
Dancers and the Discourses of Sexuality and Sexuality
43:29 • 3min
16
Dancerhood Is Like a Direct Line to Wifehood
46:45 • 5min
17
Transnationalism and Cast and Race in the Book
51:44 • 4min
18
Transnationalism
55:45 • 3min
19
Is That How Anthropology Gets Started?
58:41 • 2min
20
Auto Ethnography
01:01:05 • 4min
21
I'm Glad You're Able to Explore This With Mentors
01:05:10 • 2min
22
I Still Find Jasmine So Interesting and Puzzling
01:07:34 • 4min
23
Anandin by Raviya - Book Review
01:11:54 • 4min