Drama of Democracy

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A01=Lisa Bjorkman
artifice
Author_Lisa Bjorkman
authoritarian
Bombay
bribery
Category=JHMC
Category=JP
Category=JPHV
citizenship
communication
democracy
drama
election
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnography
India
infrastructure
kaaghaz
khoon
liberalism
marathi
Modi
money
mumbaikars
natak
performance
performative
performativity
political life
politics
populism
representation
rhetoric
slums
social work
spectacle
theatricality
urdu

Product details

  • ISBN 9781517918941
  • Weight: 425g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Sep 2025
  • Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The performative arts of political communication and representation in Mumbai


In an era of global political passions, many have wondered whether some sort of natural affinity exists between political style and substance. Does liberal democracy speak the language of rationality and sincerity while political emotion, imagery, and embodiment properly belong to authoritarianism? Taking an ethnographic approach to the relationship between political form and political content, Drama of Democracy explores the material substance of representations (things like heady crowds and rousing images) together with language-based forms of political communication, such as public oration and community meetings.

Drawing on a decade of research in the city of Mumbai, Lisa BjÖrkman shows that embodied performance is the very site and substance of representation and demonstrates how Mumbaikars evaluate performative bids to represent. The ethnographic accounts demonstrate the extraordinary fluency in this evaluative work in Mumbai, where people from all walks of life are remarkably astute at navigating and assessing political signs and representations, endlessly discussing and debating possible meanings of the city’s dense material-semiotic ecologies—whether words or images, cash or crowds, flyers or flowers.

In Mumbai, BjÖrkman argues, the evaluative criterion of representation is not whether something is sign or substance, or even whether people are deemed to utter truths or falsehoods. Rather, what matters is whether and how a performance activates and actuates the social relations and political subjectivities that it professes to display. Drama of Democracy highlights Mumbaikars’ communicative fluency and theatrical acumen to offer a conceptual toolbox through which contemporary political churnings around the globe might be understood.

Lisa BjÖrkman is associate professor at the University of Louisville and senior research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology. She is author of Pipe Politics, Contested Waters: Embedded Infrastructures of Millennial Mumbai; Waiting Town: Life in Transit and Mumbai’s Other World-Class Histories; and Bombay Brokers.

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