01621nam a2200241Ia 4500003000400000005001700004008004100021020001800062040001000080082001000090082000800100100002400108245007100132260001400203260000900217300000800226365000800234365001100242365000700253365000800260505108600268650002501354OSt20220303093438.0181031s9999 xx 000 0 und d a9780367239527 ckrvia a720.1 bCHA aSwati Chattopadhyay aRepresenting Calcutta: Modernity, Nationalism and Colonial Uncanny bRoutledge c2006 a314 b895 cRupees d20 e716 aIntroduction: the city in historical imagination: Representing modernity and nationalism p.1, Received histories p.6, Thinking spatially p.10, Public space p.14, Plan of this book p.19, 1. The colonial uncanny Eye of a European p.21, Drawing boundaries p.28, Scientific accuracy and the picturesque p.33, Depicting Calcutta p.46, Pathological space p.62, From picturesque paintings to health maps p.68, 2. The limits of "white" town: Topographic palimpsest p.76, Built for speculation p.92, Out of England? p.109, “A long opera" p.118, 3. Locating mythic selves: Public sphere and public space p.136, Discursive strategies p.141, Translating architecture p.150, The art of remembering p.167, 4.Telling stories: Dwelling in Modernity p.179, The speech culture of the middle class p.186, On the edge of the sheet p.194, The language of material culture p.216, 5. Death in public: Women in public p.225, Representing sexual transgression p.237, Desire and devotion in nationalist imagination p.237, Displacement p.248, The trouble with their bodies p.254, Mapping domesticity p.265  aArchitectural Theory