Seen & Unseen Bangalore

Seen & Unseen Bangalore

Author: Arun Bharadwaj

Publisher: Notion Press

Published: 2016-06-20

Total Pages: 426

ISBN-13: 9386073188

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Seen and Unseen Bangalore is a hand-held museum of Bangalore District, which highlights the history of the region over the centuries, and some of the fascinating and unknown facts of the city, which a regular tourist might not be aware of. You would be taken through the streets and buildings of Bangalore, which speak about the past, and you would also seem lost amidst developments and modern structures next door.


Unseen Showers

Unseen Showers

Author: Sana Twinkle

Publisher: Clever Fox Publishing

Published:

Total Pages: 108

ISBN-13:

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Moral stories, poems and about my unique life


The Future of Bangalore’s Cosmopolitan Pasts

The Future of Bangalore’s Cosmopolitan Pasts

Author: Andrew C. Willford

Publisher: University of Hawaii Press

Published: 2018-06-30

Total Pages: 256

ISBN-13: 0824875435

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Bangalore is often heralded as India’s future—a city where global technologies converge with multinational capital to produce a cosmopolitan workforce and vibrant economic growth. In this narrative the city’s main challenge revolves around its success: whether its physical infrastructure can support its burgeoning population. Most observers assume that Bangalore’s emergence as a “global city” represents its more complete integration into the world economy and, by extension, a more inclusive and cosmopolitan outlook among its growing middle class. Andrew C. Willford sheds light on a growing paradox: even as Bangalore has come to signify “progress” and economic possibility both within India and to the outside world, movements to make the city more monocultural and monolinguistic have gained prominence. Bangalore is the capital of the state of Karnataka, its borders linguistically redrawn by the postcolonial Indian state in 1956. In the decades that followed, organizations and leaders emerged to promote linguistic nationalism aimed at protecting the fragile unity of Kannadiga culture and literature against the twin threats of globalization and internal migration. Ironically, they support parochial cultural policies that impose a cultural and linguistic unity upon an area that historically stood at the crossroads of empires, trade routes, language practices, devotional literatures, and pilgrimage routes. Willford’s analysis, which focuses on the minority experience of Bangalore’s sizeable Tamil-speaking community, shows how the same forces of globalization that create growth and prosperity also foster uncertainty and tension around religion and language that completely contradict the region’s long history of cosmopolitanism. Exploring this paradox in Bangalore’s entangled and complex linguistic and cultural pasts serves as a useful case study for understanding the forces behind cultural and ethnic revivalism in the contemporary postcolonial world. Buttressed by field research conducted over a twenty-two-year period (1992–2015), Willford shows how the past is a living resource for the negotiation of identity in the present. Against the gloom of increasingly communal conflicts, he finds that Bangalore still retains a fabric of civility against the modern markings of cultural difference.


Unseen City

Unseen City

Author: Ankhi Mukherjee

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2021-12-09

Total Pages: 279

ISBN-13: 1316517586

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Reconfiguring the lines between literature and psychoanalysis, this book argues that to alleviate poverty we engage with its psychic life.