Acts of Seeing: The Role of Popular Visual Culture in Shaping India’s Modern History - A Book Seminar Jointly Organised by NUS and NTU

History - 2025-03-12 Freitag
12 Mar 2025 04.00 PM - 05.00 PM Block AS7, #01-17, (Seminar Room B) 5 Arts Link Singapore, 117570 Alumni, Current Students, Industry/Academic Partners, Prospective Students, Public
Organised by:
Emma Flatt

Acts of Seeing, Ways of Knowing: Visual Culture in the Making of Modern India refracts the nineteenth and twentieth centuries history of India through reception of the first two ‘mass’ forms of visual culture, photography and posters. India’s responses to a changing public world are revealed, intriguingly, through this visual-culture repertoire. Production and consumption of these material objects revolve especially around visual culture’s capacity to prompt and express identity-narratives that draw on the nexus of a dramatic expansion of consumption practices with individual efforts to construct meaning by collecting, displaying, designing, and interacting with mass-produced materials. They emerge as markers of those intending to be good, modern, citizens, who are drawn, significantly, from both middle- and lower-class/caste participants.

Professor Sandria B Freitag

Department of History 

North Carolina State University

United States of America


Joint Book Seminar jointly organised by the Institute of South Asian Studies, NUS; South Asia Cluster, Nanyang Technological University; South Asian Studies Programme, NUS; and Art History Minor, NUS