TY - BOOK AU - Pamment,Claire ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Comic Performance in Pakistan: The Bhānd T2 - Palgrave Studies in Comedy SN - 9781137566317 AV - PN1560-1590 U1 - 790 23 PY - 2017/// CY - London PB - Palgrave Macmillan UK, Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan KW - Performing arts KW - Theater—History KW - Ethnology—Middle East  KW - Ethnology—Asia KW - Comedy KW - Performing Arts KW - Theatre History KW - Middle Eastern Culture KW - Asian Culture KW - Comedy Studies N1 - Introduction -- Part One: Genealogies -- 1.In the Centres and Margins of the Historical Record -- 2.Brahmin Jesters and Sufi Wise Fools -- Part Two: Contemporary Performance -- 3.Wedding Bhānds: ‘From the Donkey Cart to the Aeroplane’ -- 4.Bhānds in the Drawing Room: The Popular Punjabi Theatre -- 5.Satellite Bhānds: Playful Outsiders -- Conclusion: Future Moves?; Available to subscribing member institutions only. Доступно лише організаціям членам підписки N2 - ‘This book shatters preconceptions about Muslim culture as deftly as do the comic performers it describes. Claire Pamment has written a landmark study of Pakistani comedians proving that the bhānd tradition of popular comedy deserves the appreciation and respect granted to Italian Commedia dell'Arte, English Music Hall, and American Vaudeville. Pamment's rich descriptions and penetrating analysis brings these brilliant clowns to life as virtuoso chroniclers of absurdity, past and present.’ – Ron Jenkins, author of Subversive Laughter: The Liberating Power of Comedy ‘Pamment makes an invaluable contribution to South Asian theatre and performance history and to an understanding of the politics of high and low culture.’ – Nandi Bhatia, University of Western Ontario, Canada ‘Defying closure and familiar binaries, this book, like the bhānd tradition itself, celebrates the fluid play between Hinduism and Sufism, royal courts and the public bazaar, the centre and the margin, the traditional and the contemporary. Pamment’s erudite scholarship is paired with an abiding appreciation for the artfulness and values of the licensed fools it describes. This is a superb addition to our all too limited knowledge of this lively tradition and its legacy, and a wonderful antidote to the now frequently conveyed impression of Islamic cultures as inherently inimical to humour.’ – John Emigh, Brown University, USA This book explores comic performance in Pakistan through the vibrant Indo-Muslim tradition of the Punjabi bhānd which now holds a marginal space in contemporary weddings. With irreverent repartee, genealogical prowess, a topsy-turvy play with hierarchies and shape shifting, the low-status bhānd jostles space in otherwise rigid class and caste hierarchies. Tracing these negotiations in both historical and contemporary sites, the author unfolds a dynamic performance mode that travels from the Sanskrit jester and Sufi wise fool, into Muslim royal courts and households, weddings, contemporary carnivalesque and erotic popular Punjabi theatre and satellite television news. Through original historical and ethnographic research, this book brings to life hitherto unexplored territories of Pakistani popular culture and Indo-Muslim performance histories UR - https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-56631-7 ER -