"<i>Shoveling Smoke</i> is an extremely rich ethnography. One of the first anthropological studies of advertising in India, it is a truly pioneering piece of work."-Purnima Mankekar, author of<i> Screening Culture, Viewing Politics: An Ethnography of Television, Womanhood, and Nation in Postcolonial India</i> "Theoretically ambitious and yet firmly grounded in the concrete, William Mazzarella's brilliantly imaginative ethnography of advertising and consumer practices in India ranks among the very best of globalization studies. Students of global forms of modernity will have much to learn from this book."-Dipesh Chakrabarty, author of <i>Habitations of Modernity: Essays in the Wake of Subaltern Studies</i>
An examination of the complex cultural politics of mass consumerism in a globalized marketplace, Shoveling Smoke is a pathbreaking and detailed ethnography of the contemporary Indian advertising industry. It is also a critical and innovative intervention into current theoretical debates on the intersection of consumerist globalization, aesthetic politics, and visual culture. William Mazzarella traces the rise in India during the 1980s of mass consumption as a self-consciously sensuous challenge to the austerities of state-led developmentalism. He shows how the decisive opening of Indian markets to foreign brands in the 1990s refigured established models of the relationship between the local and the global and, ironically, turned advertising professionals into custodians of cultural integrity.
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction
1. Locations: Advertising and the New Swadeshi 3
2. Elaborations: The Commodity Image 37
Part One
3. Citizens Have Sex, Consumers Make Love: KamaSutra I 59
4. The Aesthetic Politics of Aspiration: KamaSutra II 99
Part Two
5. Bombay Global: Mobility and Locality I 149
6. Bombay Local: Mobility and Locality II 185
Part Three
7. Indian Fun: Constructing "the Indian Consumer" I 215
8. Close Distance: Constructing "the Indian Consumer" II 250
Notes 289
Works Cited 331
Index 351
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
William Mazzarella is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Chicago.