HEREDITY ABANDONED, AND KANNAGI'S COURAGEOUSDECISION TO ACT IN SPECIAL DRAMA

Authors

  • SUSAN SEIZER

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53007/SJGC.2016.V1.I2.150

Keywords:

Kannagi, hereditary acting lineage, special drama actress, special drama community, fifth generation family, Tamil stage ethnography, Indian cultural anthropology

Abstract

Women artists have performed in the Tamil theatre genre known as Special Drama since the early twentieth century, though they have been highly stigmatized for their participation. Based on ethnographic fieldwork with Special Drama artists in the early 1990s, I returned in 2014- 2015 to conduct a follow- up study on the subsequent generations of drama family lineages. I became increasingly concerned – largely because this proved a primary concern of the artists themselves – with problems posed by the lack of any established route for the cultural transmission of knowledge of this field. In this essay I document one hereditary acting family lineage in which the stigma on stage actresses has resulted in a silencing of family history. I discuss Special Drama artists’ ideas for how to encourage subsequent generations to take up this profession, and how my own presence and support contributed to their efforts to repatriate the artistic tradition. I focus specifically on the courageous decision of one young woman, a member of the fifth generation in the hereditary acting lineage I document, to buck the trend of her generation and become a dramatic Heroine even in the face of the globalizing social and economic climate of contemporary India.

Downloads

Published

2016-07-31

How to Cite

SUSAN SEIZER. “HEREDITY ABANDONED, AND KANNAGI’S COURAGEOUSDECISION TO ACT IN SPECIAL DRAMA”. Samyukta: A Journal of Gender and Culture, vol. 1, no. 2, July 2016, doi:10.53007/SJGC.2016.V1.I2.150.