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Another Hyderabad in Deccan
Material Culture and Artistic Practice in South Asia
Another Hyderabad in Deccan
Material Culture and Artistic Practice in South Asia
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Description
This anthology on the material culture and artistic practices in Deccani Hyderabad brings forth the materiality of underrepresented voices entangled with histories, archives, architecture, lives of images and intangible knowledge production. Uniquely positioned, this book weaves together the research methodologies of art, historical studies, ethnography and artistic practices.
Another Hyderabad in Deccan discusses the embodied network of artisanal practices in Hyderabad, the palimpsest of cultivated and collected material culture. The nine essays in the book, which are in conversation with memories of the people, photographic records, scribbles, maps, assimilating histories, biographies, habitual practices, and experiential knowledge, reflect upon the unconfessed visual repository of Hyderabad as a way of survival.
The recent art and historical studies on South Asia, especially the region and the city, have directed attention to the relevance of ecology and artistic practices. Yet, a critical consideration of the lineage between material, communities, art and ethnography remains missing. The book deals with the dusty, shadowy, grey and unacknowledged areas of visual and material culture: their historicity and contemporaneity, while presenting a range of directions and methodological interventions for conducting archival and interactive investigations.
While offering the scope of newer research on the Deccan region, the anthology provides comprehensive knowledge to students in regional, cultural and art historical studies, opens up diverse range of methodologies to assist young researchers studying South Asian visual and material culture, and foregrounds resources to the professional and entrepreneur involved in cultural industries, community engagement, and artisanal development policies.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Baishali Ghosh and Rajarshi Sengupta
Chapter One
Buddhist Material at the State Museum, Hyderabad: Between Negotiation and Repatriation
Prajnna Vedavyas
Chapter Two
A Review of the Nizam's Numaish-gaah Sehat
P. Sindhuri Aparna
Chapter Three
Qutb Shahi Eidgah: An Analysis on manifestation of South Asian Islamic Architecture
Shaista Anwar
Chapter Four
Chronicles of the Temple Painters in Hyderabad
Bijay Nath
Chapter Five
Lives of the Family Photo Albums in Hyderabad
Kesawram
Chapter Six
The Dargah Locale in Hyderabad: A Junction of the Architectural Past and Present
Sayan Gupta
Chapter Seven
Reclaiming Multiplicity in Deccani Craft Making: Case Study of a Transitional Artisan
Rajarshi Sengupta
Chapter Eight
Becoming a Master: Discourses on weaving and its transmission
Somedutta Mallik
Chapter Nine
What is Natural about Natural Dyeing?
Tanaya Pashankar
About the Editors and Contributors
Index
Product details
| Published | 30 Sep 2025 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 296 |
| ISBN | 9789361312472 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury India |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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This fascinating anthology uncovers history that has escaped the grip of institutional archives. The authors offer an archaeology of varied artistic and craft practices as an alternative vision of Hyderabad and the Deccan, post-independence.
There is not just one Hyderabad. The authors unveil the Deccani multiplicity by drawing on minority histories to resist the dominance of a singular narrative. The recognition of deep involvement of communities in shaping the many-layered facets of cities serves as an important methodological invitation to all researchers. This 'contextual conversation' offers an exchange between dominant and subaltern historical accounts.
The book thus provides the groundwork for a rediscovery of cities by focusing on the interactive and intersected material and artistic practices-a must-read for all students of crafts, arts, heritage and cities.Professor Wiebe E. Bijker, Maastricht University, The Netherlands
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In this thought provoking volume, a new generation of scholars asks new questions using innovative sources and methodologies to explore the visual and material culture of the Deccan's storied past. A much too storied past. Peeling back layers of colonial narrative and received wisdoms, the nine chapters compel us to consider unacknowledged and understudied Decanni multiplicities, going beyond the archive to bring forth the voices, intentionalities and movements of marginalised artisans and communities, from vernacular Islamic architecture, to Dravida temple painters, to influential 21st century weavers. A model for knowledge producers everywhere seeking alternative ways to envision the historical past.
Sarah Fee Ph.D., Senior Curator, Global Fashion & Textiles, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Associate Professor (status only), Dept. of Art History University of Toronto
























