Performing Resistance: Imagining Nation in Sama’s Play Amar Singha

Authors

  • Shobhakant Regmi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/ijmss.v3i1.50239

Keywords:

performance, resistance, writings and reflections, consolidated nationalism, political memory, identity and power

Abstract

Framing the concept of performance as a mode of resistance in aesthetic production is itself a rigorous act, nevertheless this article aims to unleash how these modes of resistance are articulated through the characters in the historical play, Amarsingh (1991) by Balakrishna Sama. The performance of the characters, as such; Amar, Girvana, Balabhadra, Ranajor Singh and the soldiers involved in the Anglo- Nepal war on border disputes during the19th century shed the light on Nationalist mode of resistance against their enemies (firangees). Mostly, the spontaneous counteracts as they pose from side to side against the frontier enemies are akin to imagine a ‘consolidated nationalism’ as a whole. In this context, Sama’s play Amarsingh lays the foundation to imagine nation as a whole through the mode of ‘writing back’ as performing the resistance.

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Published

2022-06-30

How to Cite

Shobhakant Regmi. (2022). Performing Resistance: Imagining Nation in Sama’s Play Amar Singha. Interdisciplinary Journal of Management and Social Sciences, 3(1), 135–139. https://doi.org/10.3126/ijmss.v3i1.50239

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Section

Articles