Anti-Colonial Performance Traditions in Manipur: Perspectives from Shumang Kumhei Theatre

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25120/etropic.22.1.2023.3962

Keywords:

Shumang Leela/Shumang Kumhei, Manipur India, Meitei Indigenous theatre, anti-colonial performance, decolonization, Hinduization

Abstract

Post-colonialism has not brought to an end the perpetuation of colonial power structures and suppression. The ex-colonized countries still suffer from many forms of colonialism. In Manipur, a state located in the northeastern corner of India within the monsoonal tropics, complex political and cultural issues such as insurgencies, militarization and problems of Hinduization interweave through the post-colonial scenario. The rise of insurgencies after Manipur’s merger to the Indian Union in 1949, have resulted in armed conflicts within the state and have brought situations of turmoil and suffering to the people. Prior to British colonization, Hinduization had already begun in the 15th century and the ‘cultural insurgents’ of Manipur to this day consider it a lasting imperialist force which tries to subjugate and suppress the Indigenous culture and religion of the people of Manipur. In these circumstances, theatre, which is the closest medium to the people, evolved as a decolonizing agent by proposing self-determination and peace building. Hence, by taking the account of Manipur and its Indigenous Meitei theatre form of Shumang Kumhei, this paper attempts to discuss the power and purpose of theatre in situations where political, religious and cultural suppression still operate and colonial structures still function, now in neocolonial forms.  

Author Biography

RK Yaibiren Sana, Tezpur University

R.K. Yaibiren Sana is a fulltime PhD research scholar in the Department of Mass Communication and Journalism at Tezpur University, Assam, India. He is a recipient of the ICCSR (Indian Council for Social Science Research) Doctoral fellowship on the topic ‘Aesthetics of traditional theatre of Manipur; Perspectives from Shumang Kumhei’. He is closely working with his Meitei community for this research and has presented papers in National and International Seminars on topics ranging across Meitei Folk theatre, Popular Culture, Media and Insurgency. His interest areas include culture and communication, traditional medium and Film studies. 

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Published

2023-07-03

How to Cite

Sana, R. Y. (2023). Anti-Colonial Performance Traditions in Manipur: Perspectives from Shumang Kumhei Theatre. ETropic: Electronic Journal of Studies in the Tropics, 22(1), 100–118. https://doi.org/10.25120/etropic.22.1.2023.3962

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Section

Performativity and Performances