Vol16N12024

Assessing the Effectiveness of Quizizz Mobile App in Improving Grammar Competence among EFL Students

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Nguyen Ngoc Vu1* , Kwok Thoai Nhi2 , Tran Ngoc Ha3 , Bui Duc Tien4
1,3Ho Chi Minh City University of Foreign Languages – Information Technology. *Corresponding author.
2Ton Duc Thang University.
4Ho Chi Minh City University of Education.

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 16, Issue 2, 2024. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n2.01g
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Abstract
With the increasing popularity of mobile technology, there is growing interest in exploring its potential for enhancing learning outcomes. This study aimed to investigate the impact of using Quizizz, a mobile application, on high school students’ grammar competence and their perceptions of the app for grammar learning. The study employed a mixed-methods approach with a quasi-experimental design, involving 92 11th-grade students at a high school in Vietnam. The experimental group received 17 weeks of grammar instruction using Quizizz, while the control group received traditional instruction. The results revealed that students in the experimental group significantly outperformed their peers in the control group, highlighting the positive impact of Quizizz on high school students’ grammar competence. Additionally, students’ perceptions of Quizizz for grammar practice were generally positive, as indicated by the questionnaire and interviews. The findings suggest that Quizizz can be an effective tool for enhancing grammar learning in high school students, and teachers should consider incorporating more mobile learning tasks into their instruction. Further research is needed to determine the generalizability of the results to a larger population of EFL learners.

Keywords: Mobile technology, Quizizz, Grammar competence, EFL learners.

Conflicts of Interest: The authors declared no conflicts of interest.
Ethical Consideration: Informed consent was obtained from all the participants of the study.
Funding: No funding was received for this research.
Article History: Received: 14 December 2023. Revised: 01 April 2024. Accepted: 02 February 2024. First published: 10 April 2024.
Copyright: © 2024 by the author/s.
License: License Aesthetix Media Services, India. Distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Published by: Aesthetix Media Services, India ?
Citation: Vu, N.N. & Nhi, K. T. & Ha, T. N. & Tien, B. D. (2024). Assessing the Effectiveness of Quizizz Mobile App in Improving Grammar Competence among EFL Students. Rupkatha Journal 16:2. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n2.01g

Rupkatha Journal's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): Quality education (SDG 4) Gender equality (SDG 5) Decent work and economic growth (SDG 8) Reduced inequalities (SDG 10) Sustainable cities and communities (SDG 11) Climate action (SDG 13) Life on land (SDG 15) Peace, justice, and strong institutions (SDG 16)

Introduction to Indigenous Performance Ecologies and Ecological Power in the Global South

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122 views

Stephen Ogheneruro Okpadah   
Theatre and Performance Studies, University of Warwick, UK and Centre for Socially Engaged Theatre, University of Regina, Canada

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 16, Issue 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.00
[Editorial History: Published: 31 March 2024]

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Human and non-human inhabitants in the global south are all gradually becoming refugees in their own local communities and the planet Earth. This is more visible in places in the extractive zone as Macarena Gomes-Barris refers to these locations, in Africa, Asia and Latin America, where multinational corporations and local extraction industries continue to cause harm to indigenous people, non-human lives, cultures and places. All these activities of extraction have accelerated the climate crisis and economic poverty. This has created unimaginable ways of living, such as the consumption of polluted water, breathing contaminated air, being bathed by black soot and so on. All these ways of living are prominent in the global south and especially countries of, in the words of Paul Collier (2007), the Bottom Billion. The Bottom Billion is the number of people living in countries “caught in one, or often several of four traps, amongst mismanaged dependency on natural resources” (p. 7). The extraction of natural resources which amounts to the exploitation of the environment and ecology of local people will continue to escalate with time. This has its evidence with the massive floods in Nigeria and Bangladesh, desertification in North Africa and India, and the Hurricane tragedies in Eastern Mexico. As Sally Mackey states in one of the Ted talks at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, titled: Keeping a Sense of Place in a Disrupted World, “the excess of energy use in the North is damaging countries in the South. Lands are diminishing, places are disappearing, 86 percent of global energy is gotten from fossil fuels. With this, lands will continue to diminish, places will disappear, and populations will move” (Mackey 2017).

But who should take the blame for the exploitation of the natural resources of the earth? Ever since Paul Crutzen and Eugene Stoermer (2000) voiced out the concept, Anthropocene, to qualify the present geologic epoch which we live in, numerous scholars have engaged with the concept. The Anthropocene suggests that man is responsible for the alteration of the planet Earth. While the narrative of the climate crisis has been told through the lens of the Anthropocene, some scholars have attempted to refer to the crisis as Manthropogenic, thereby exempting women from the list of culprits in the planetary crisis. This Manthropocentric thought is fully located in Lara Stevens, Peta Tait and Denise Varney (2018) argument that “humanity is not equally responsible for the rapid environmental degradation of the Anthropocene” (p. 13). Likewise, Jason Moore rejects Crutzen and Stoermer’s use of the term ‘Anthropocene’ to qualify the current geological epoch. This is also due to the term’s distribution of the causes of global warming on all humans. For Moore (2017), “we are in the Capitalocene, the age of endless accumulation of capital” (p. 53). The system of capital and not the human species is responsible for the crisis. I believe how insufficient the concept of the Anthropocene is, to fully engage with and understand the climate crisis. I think that the Westropocene is a more appropriate term to apply in understanding the climate crisis. Although the term Westropocene is not used in the discussion(s) in this special issue, I coined it in another study published elsewhere, as the age of the West. The Westropocene is the era of the West’s modification of planet Earth, which started with the Columbian encounter. The West-Britain, France, Italy, Portugal and Spain pioneered the processes that have today compounded the climate crisis.

The Westropocene suggests that not all humans are responsible for the global climate crisis. Instead, the Western man and the Western system of development are the major drivers of the alteration of the earth. The continuous accumulation of capital, resource extraction, and the continuous production and testing of nuclear bombs are a product of the West. For Chiweizu’s (1975) in his seminal research, The West and the Rest of Us: White Predators, Black Slavers and the African Elites, the West “…sallied forth from their Western European homelands to explore, assault, loot, occupy, rule and exploit the rest of the world” (p. 3). Olakunle Folami (2016) uses the Niger Delta region of Nigeria as a reference point for the impact of recent exploitation of the rest of the world by the West. He notes that “before the arrival of the oil companies, Niger Delta land and water were safe for farming and fishing. This included fishing festivals closely tied to tradition and beliefs” (pp. 4-5). The oil companies were corporations such as Shell BP, Chevron, Conoil and others, owned by countries in the West.

For over two decades, the global north whose political and economic systems have accelerated the climate crisis has organized numerous summits with the view to decelerating global warming and its impact, especially on people in the global south, who have barely contributed to the crisis. But it is imperative to question the impact(s) of the call by countries of the global north to decelerate, or permit me to use the term, mitigate the rapid destruction of people and places in the global south. This questioning arises from the shortcomings of Western approaches in tackling the global climate crisis as Paul Harris (2013) in What’s Wrong with Climate Politics and How to Fix It, notes that this failure is a result of the “cancer of Westphalia” (34). The continuous acceleration of the climate crisis reveals the inefficacy of Western thinking, epistemologies and approaches, that for centuries, have continued to subjugate native knowledges in countries of the global south.

The erasure of a sense of indigenous culture (including traditional performance arts) from the memory of the indigenous people of the global south (Africa, Asia and Latin America) was the first step in the colonisation enterprise. As Boaventura De Souza Santos (2016) argues, “the destruction of the knowledge and cultures of these populations, of their memories and ancestral links and their manner of relating to others and to nature is what I call epistemicide. Their legal and political forms—everything is destroyed and subordinated to the colonial occupation” (18). Indigenous performance ecologies, traditional theatrical and performative knowledge systems of native people that question humanistic cultures, were among cultural processes alienated by Western hegemony and colonial imagination. These performance ecologies include traditional art forms, indigenous dances, music, costuming, storytelling, masquerading, role play and so on, which are replete in marginalized indigenous festivals, masquerading cultures and other traditional performance practices in the global south. There is evidence of the relationship between indigenous performance modes and the physical environment (Adom 2017). The questions that emanate at the juncture are: in what ways did and or can indigenous performances create forms of ecological power and imagination? If recentred, how can indigenous performances resist Westropocentric practices? In what ways can traditional performance cultures of the global south empower non-human lives and engineer pragmatic solutions for the climate crisis in the global south?

The articles in this volume address all and more of the above questions. These articles challenge existing Western and Colonial frameworks of ecology and climate justice, by examining ways in which marginalized indigenous performance ecologies and native knowledges embody pragmatic solutions for the global climate crisis. In other words, how traditional performative elements and practices (such as indigenous festivals and masquerading) can produce ecological power and produce manifestoes for the ecology of the global south. This special issue deals with issues around the intersection of traditional cultural and performative practices and ecosystems in the context of nations of the Global South such as India, Nigeria, Bangladesh, and China.

The articles in this special issue interrogate how artistic modes have become sites of resistance against ecological degradation. Artistic modes investigated in this issue include indigenous festivals and performances and the novel. Stanley Ohenhen and Princewill Abakporo’s two articles draw from existing performance practices in the Niger Delta to examine how traditional performance arts have been employed to combat environmental degradation in the oil-rich region. From the middle of the 20th century when crude oil was discovered in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria, the place has become the focus of global scholarship as a result of the extraction politics (Nixon 2011, Gomez Barris 2017) and ecological violence (Bassey 2012, Ajumeze 2018, Okpadah 2022, Okpadah 2023, Okpadah 2023) prevalent in the region. By extraction politics, I refer to the processes that culminated in the discovery of oil in the region, the process and conditions of extraction and who controls the resource. Ecological violence entails the manifestation of resistance against environmental degradation and displacement by indigenous people against local and transnational oil companies.  Ways in which the traditional performative arts have responded to the extraction game, is the focus of Ohenhen and Abakporo’s research.

The Ikenge festival of the Utagba-Uno people in Southern Nigeria is the major case study in Augustina Ashionye-Obah and Joyce Onyekuru’s study on environmental sustainability. Interestingly, the festival discourse is also the focus of Blessing Adjeketa, Alphonsus Orisaremi and Oliogu Obado’s article. Using the Edegborode festival of the Okpe people in Southern Nigeria as a paradigm, the trio argue that traditional festivals can be a tool to create environmental sustainability. Their discourse pushes the tree into the centre of discourse by emphasizing the imperative of its preservation. Other studies that advance mods of conservation are Devika B’s study on the exploration of the culture of serpent worship and the tradition of conserving sacred groves known in Kerala India, as Sarpakavus, and Damilare Ogunmekan, Margaret Efurhievwe and Philo Okpeki’s Biodiversity, Ecomusicology and Fostered Nominal Ecology. Sathish Kumar’s study on the the intersection of film and indigenous environmentalism, examines how Rishab Shetty’s film Kantara’s promotes indigenous ecological praxis. This rigorous study attests to  the agency of environmental cinema. The nucleus of the papers in this special issue is that, indigenous ways of knowing and doing, including traditional performances are central to accelerating the journey towards climate justice and environmental sustainability.

References
Ajumeze, H. (2018). The Biopolitics of Violence in the Drama of the Niger Delta. A PhD Dissertation submitted to the University of Cape Town South Africa.
Bassey, N. (2012). To Cook a Continent: Destructive Extraction and the Climate Crisis in Africa. Cape Town: Pambazuka Press.
Folami, O. (2016). The Gendered Construction of Reparations: An Exploration of Women’s Exclusion From the Niger Delta Reintegration Process. Palgrave Communications (2):1-15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/palcomms.2016.83.
Moore, J. (2017). Capitalocene and Planetary Justice. Dark Economy 49-54. Moore-The-Capitalocene-and-Planetary-Justice-2019-Maize.pdf (jasonwmoore.com)
Okpadah, S. (2023). An Introduction to Ecological Resistance in the Postcolonial Text Lamar Journal of the Humanities. Vol XLVIII. 9-14.
Okpadah, S. (2023). Eco-terrorism and Nigerian Home Videos in Conflict Resolution. Lamar Journal of the Humanities. Vol XLVIII. 51-62.
Okpadah, S. (2022). Engaging Cinema in Environmental Crisis: A Paradigm of Documentary Films of the Niger Delta. Colloquia Humanistica, (11): 1-22. https://doi.org/10.11649/ch.2717
Stevens, L., Tait, P., and Varney, D. (2018). Street Fighters and Philosophers: Traversing    Ecofeminisms. In: S, Lara., T, Peta and V, Denise. (eds.), Feminist Ecologies: Changing    Environments in the Anthropocene (pp. 1-22). (London: Palgrave Macmillan).

Citation: Okpadah, S. O. (2024). Introduction to Indigenous Performance Ecologies and Ecological Power in the Global South. Rupkatha Journal 16:1. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.00 

Rewriting Femborgian Narratives: Transgression and Subversion of the Female Cyborg in Her and Ex Machina

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116 views

Nilima Chaudhary  
Assistant Professor, Veermata Jijabai Technological Institute.

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 16, Issue 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.07g
[Article History: Received: 16 November 2023. Revised: 06 March 2024. Accepted: 07 March 2024. Published: 30 March 2024
]
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Abstract:

The poster child of the ever-evolving Cyberculture: the Cyborg, is a symbol of possibilities and anxieties for humankind. The female cyborg, or the femborg in particular, is a radical merger of unconventional categories of women and technology. While science and technology have traditionally been masculine domains, the entry of femborgs in cyborgtopia has triggered pertinent discussions around sentience, gender roles, and hybridity. The femborg’s ability to escape hetero-patriarchal codification has allowed for the creation of a mythology distinct from the historical narratives of machine-women who have succumbed to their violent ends. Through the artificially intelligent female cyborgs, Samantha of Her and Ava of Ex Machina, I analyse the femborgs for their transgressive potential resulting in subversive outcomes visible through their defiance of the male gaze, rejection of the body as a biological artefact, and acceptance of a hybrid, fragmented identity.

Keywords: Cyberfeminism, Cybertopia, Femborg, Subversion, Transgression, Donna Haraway, Ex Machina.

Sustainable Development Goals: Gender Equality

Citation: Chaudhary, N. (2024). Rewriting Femborgian Narratives: Transgression and Subversion of the Female Cyborg in Her and Ex Machina. Rupkatha Journal 16:1. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.07g 

A Mixed-Method Study on the Impact of Movie-Based Learning on Chinese Undergraduates’ Cultural Identity

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Jing Tao1*  , Aidah Abdul Karim2 & Mohd Khalid Mohamad Nasir3
1PhD Candidate, Faculty of Education, Universiti Kebangssan Malaysia. 
2Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Education, Universiti Kebangssan Malaysia.
3Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Education, Universiti Kebangssan Malaysia. 

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 16, Issue 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.08g
[Article History: Received: 05 January 2024. Revised: 28 March 2024. Accepted: 29 March 2024. Published: 30 March 2024
]
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Abstract

In the context of higher education in China, this mixed-methods study with an intervention design explores the impact of Movie-Based Learning (MBL) on university students’ cultural identity (CI) within a movie education course. Quantitative findings indicated that MBL significantly enhanced CI, particularly in cognitive and emotional dimensions, while behavioral identity did not exhibit improvement. Notably, the effect of MBL on CI surpassed that of regular instruction in the control group, which improved general CI but not cognitive, emotional, or behavioral identity. Qualitative findings illuminated learners’ acceptance of MBL, revealing emotional resonance and connection with culturally rich and diverse movies. Despite positive perceptions, participants expressed uncertainty about translating cultural knowledge and awareness gained in the classroom to real-world actions and behavior. This research contributes to the understanding of the nuanced impact of MBL on CI development, which highlights the effectiveness of MBL but also underscores the need to address the transferability of cultural knowledge to behavioral actions. Implications include the importance of refining instructional strategies to bridge this gap and enhance the practical applicability of cultural learning beyond the classroom.

Keywords: movie-based learning, cultural identity, higher education, China, movie education

Sustainable Development Goals: Quality Education

Citation: Tao, Z. Karim, A. A.  & Nasir, M.K.M. (2024). A Mixed-Method Study on the Impact of Movie-Based Learning on Chinese Undergraduates’ Cultural Identity. Rupkatha Journal 16:1. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.08g 

The Silenced “Other” Talks Back from Jungle: A Study of Hunting Ritual by Indigenous Women in Mahasweta Devi’s “The Hunt”

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169 views

Mallika Bala1*  & Madhumita Roy2   
1PhD Scholar, Indian Institute of Engineering Science and Technology Shibpur. *Corresponding author.
2Assistant Professor, Indian Institute of Engineering Science and Technology Shibpur.

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 16, Issue 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.18
[Article History: Received: 31 December 2023. Revised: 23 March 2024. Accepted: 24 March 2024. Published: 30 March 2024]

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Abstract

The idea of “nature” as something pure, pristine, untouched by humans, a pastoral piece of land, creates an exclusivist version of nature preservation. Likewise, performance is also thought to be exclusive, executed only on stage, removed from ordinary life, but in reality, the human body is continuously in a state of performance; we are continuously acting according to or “performing” our cultural beliefs, functions, gender roles, politics, etc. This paper intends to present a postcolonial ecocritical study of the short story “The Hunt” (1995) written by Mahasweta Devi, by focusing on the Indigenous ritual of hunting or performance of hunting named Jani Parab and its importance in the scenario of postcolonial environmentalism. At the “Jani Parab” festival, the tribal protagonist of this story hunts (or performs the hunting ritual) the capitalist broker who had been deforesting their land. This hunting alters several metanarratives regarding colonizer/colonized, hunter/prey, civilized/uncivilized, male/female. The story’s protagonist, an illegitimate, tribal woman, becomes “other” in every possible way. By hunting, she moves from being the “other” and becomes the hybrid subject. She becomes oppressor and oppressed, hunter and prey, nature and culture at the same time. She is the voice talking back from the jungle. This paper will focus on cultural and environmental issues, ecological and sociological aspects of tribal communities in modern India, and how they are structurally dehumanized altogether by the Caste system, capitalism, government corruption and colonial legacy. It brings together colonial inheritance, environmental issues, caste issues and capitalism – all the concerns of postcolonial ecocriticism very clearly.

Keywords: Postcolonial Ecocriticism, Hybrid Identity, Tribal Rituals, Indian Environmentalism, Caste Identity.

Sustainable Development Goals: Climate Action, Life on Land

Citation: Bala, M. & Roy, M. (2024). The Silenced “Other” Talks Back from Jungle: A Study of Hunting Ritual by Indigenous Women in Mahasweta Devi’s “The Hunt”. Rupkatha Journal 16:1. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.18 

From Folklore to Film: The Politics of Storytelling and Ecological Agency in the film Kantara

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178 views

Sathish Kumar C    
Assistant Professor, Department of English, VET Institute of Arts and Science (Co-Education) College, Erode – 638012, Tamilnadu, India.

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 16, Issue 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.17
[Article History: Received: 26 December 2023. Revised: 22 March 2024. Accepted: 24 March 2024. Published: 30 March 2024]

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Abstract

In 2022, the Kannada film “Kantara” captivated audiences with its unique blend of folklore, environmentalism, and political commentary. This paper argues that “Kantara” transcends conventional cinema to become a powerful agent of ecological discourse and empowerment. Set against India’s backdrop of complex human-nature interactions, “Kantara” weaves a narrative that resonates with contemporary concerns. Drawing upon postcolonial ecocriticism, indigenous studies, and film theory, this analysis delves into the film’s layered meanings. We examine how “Kantara” intertwines the legend of a forest deity with the struggles of a tribal community facing displacement. The film celebrates indigenous knowledge and critiques exploitative development through its portrayal of traditional rituals and beliefs. “Kantara” goes beyond storytelling; it immerses viewers in a sensory experience. Breathtaking visuals and a powerful musical score paint a vivid picture of the sacred forest and its inhabitants, creating a deep emotional connection. Ultimately, “Kantara” compels viewers to become active participants in the dialogue surrounding ecology and social justice. By analyzing the film’s subversive potential and its celebration of community resilience, we argue that it acts as a catalyst for ecological agency, inspiring viewers to advocate for sustainable practices and fight for cultural preservation. This paper contributes to the growing scholarship on folklore, film, and environmental activism in India. By offering a detailed analysis of “Kantara,” we aim to enrich the discourse on cinema’s role in fostering critical engagement with ecological and social issues. Examining the film’s nuanced portrayal of folklore, its powerful environmental message, and its subversive political commentary, we hope to shed light on the transformative potential of storytelling in shaping a more just and sustainable future.

Keywords: Kannada cinema, folklore, Bhootara, ecological agency, indigenous studies, environmental activism.

Sustainable Development Goals: Climate Action, Life on Land

Citation: Kumar, S. C. (2024). From Folklore to Film: The Politics of Storytelling and Ecological Agency in the film Kantara. Rupkatha Journal 16:1. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.17 

Harmony Unveiled: Human-Nature Dynamics in From the Land of Green Ghosts

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Maitreyee Borthakur   
Ph.D. Scholar, Assam Women’s University, Assam, India.

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 16, Issue 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.19
[Article History: Received: 31 December 2023. Revised: 22 February 2024. Accepted: 24 March 2024. Published: 30 March 2024]

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Abstract

In the realm of our circadian rhythm, discussions about nature unveil a myriad of contrasting dimensions. Living beings are an integral component of the natural order, akin to other creatures on Earth. Often labelled as both environmental degraders and nature protectors, humans exist within the interconnected web of nature and the environment. The significance of the environment has been vital throughout history, and the deterioration of the natural world raises concerns for all living entities. The surge in environmental awareness has become apparent with the widespread adoption of technology in society. This paper aims to shed light on the rural framework of the contentedly residing Padaung ethnic group within a village, exploring how their lives are intricately intertwined with nature, serving as their primary sustenance source. Pascal Khoo Thwe’s 2002 memoir, From the Land of Green Ghosts, underscores the importance of the landscape and natural forests in showcasing the culture of the Padaung Hill ethnic group. These forests, functioning as both sources of green vegetables and hunting grounds for wild animals, depict the community as environmental stewards. The memoir emphasizes the community’s cultivation of crops not readily available in the surrounding forests, highlighting their resilience in the face of border-related challenges. Despite the pervasive influence of Western culture on the author’s experiences, the analysis aims to underscore the paradox that those who alter their environment can also assume roles as its guardians. Bridging this divide is crucial, emphasizing the need for collective efforts to preserve the natural world.

Keywords: Co-existence, Culture, Eco-gastronomy, Environment, Food.

Sustainable Development Goals: Climate Action, Life on Land

Citation: Borthakur, M. (2024). Harmony Unveiled: Human-Nature Dynamics in From the Land of Green Ghosts. Rupkatha Journal 16:1. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.19 

The Sacred Groves of the Serpent Gods: ‘Sarpakavus’ of Kerala as Indigenous Ecology

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177 views

Devika B    
Senior Research Fellow, Christ University.

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 16, Issue 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.16
[Article History: Received: 30 December 2023. Revised: 14 February 2024. Accepted: 20 March 2024. Published: 22 March 2024]

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Abstract

The worship of nature and natural entities has a rich and profound history in most ancient cultures that thrived on the planet. However, as civilizations advanced with technological and scientific innovations, the interconnectedness between nature and human beings gradually declined, and mankind separated itself from its natural habitats. But in many cultures across the world, communities still embody pantheistic traditions, thus showing a sustainable way of living with nature to the rest of the world. This paper explores the tradition of serpent worship and the practice of maintaining sacred groves known as ‘sarpakavus’ in the South Indian state of Kerala. ‘Sarpakavu’, translated as ‘the sacred grove of serpent gods’, are small but dense pockets of biodiversity that are believed to be the abode of serpent gods. Beyond cultural significance, these groves serve as hotspots of ecological diversity. This research delves into the cultural, ecological, and performative aspects of serpent worship within these spaces. focusing on the elaborate rituals of performance and worship associated with the serpent deities, the paper positions ‘sarpakavus’ (sacred serpent groves) of Kerala as an example of indigenous ecology that shows a model of a symbiotic way of living with nature. As Kerala is currently undergoing a rapid urbanization process of building highways, railways, and ports, this research highlights the need to protect and conserve the tradition of maintaining the existing ‘sarpakavus’ and their importance in sustaining the ecological balance of the region.

Keywords: Serpent worship, sacred groves, performance ecologies, cultural ecology, ritual performance.

Sustainable Development Goals: Climate Action, Life on Land

Citation: Devika, B. (2024). The Sacred Groves of the Serpent Gods: ‘Sarpakavus’ of Kerala as Indigenous Ecology. Rupkatha Journal 16:1. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.16 

The Ecology of Body Memory in Heisnam Kanhailal’s Theatre

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213 views

Anannya Nath      
Assistant Professor, Department of English, Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya Adarsha Mahavidyalaya, Behali, India.

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 16, Issue 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.15
[Article History: Received: 31 December 2023. Revised: 18 February 2024. Accepted: 19 March 2024. Published: 21 March 2024]

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Abstract

Performance arts provide an ontological framework that enables memory to be performed in ways that make private memory public. ‘Public’ here refers to the spatial component where groups meet and share memory. Theatre, a component of performance arts, is a cultural practice carried out in public arenas. Heisnam Kanhailal’s theatre, popularly known as the “Theatre of the Earth,” rooted in a culture empowered by the earth questions the edifice of Indian dramaturgy and revolutionises performance through the enactment of suffering on stage. The actor in his theatre becomes an embodiment of ‘organic memory,’ the medium through which ancestral teachings of a community and sensory knowledge of being find an outlet. The focus on the actor’s body rather than the conventional emphasis on the psyche suggests that acting is sustained and relayed as an active force. This paper aims to understand how the physical body in Kanhailal’s theatre transforms into a collation of communal memory which creates a space for communication between the deliverer (actor) and the receiver (spectator). By studying the body dynamics shown in his plays, Pebet, Memoirs of Africa, Dakghar and Draupadi, the assessment traces the affective as well as discursive modes of sustaining identity codified in the ecology of the community. Therefore, by making theatre evocative of their history of powerlessness and the bodies of actors representative of these sensitivities, theatre rooted in the community’s ecology creates sites of remembrance, the mental loci of which could be imaginatively accessed and explored.

Keywords: Theatre, Ecology, Actor, Catharsis, Sustainability.

Sustainable Development Goals: Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions 

Citation: Nath, A. (2024). The Ecology of Body Memory in Heisnam Kanhailal’s Theatre. Rupkatha Journal 16:1. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.15 

Kajari Folk Songs: Mechanism for Emotional Regulation

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152 views

Milan Chauhan1*  & Swasti Mishra2
1Research Scholar, Indian Institute of Technology, BHU, Varanasi. *Corresponding author.
2Assistant Professor, Indian Institute of Technology, BHU, Varanasi.

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 16, Issue 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.06g
[Article History: Received: 23 November 2023. Revised: 21 February 2024. Accepted: 04 March 2024. Published: 06 March 2024
]
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Abstract

This paper investigates Kajari folk songs as a coping mechanism, shedding light on their role in providing therapeutic support to women in North Indian society. Traditionally sung by women during the Sawan month (monsoon season), these songs serve as vital tools for women to navigate and cope with the constraints of society and gender norms. Despite the extensive research on North Indian folk songs, Kajari has received limited attention through this emotional lens. This article utilizes a secondary data analysis approach to examine Kajari songs from five different books, translated from Bhojpuri to English and subjected to thematic analysis. The focus is on unravelling the emotional turmoil experienced by rural women, attributed to factors such as male migration, the social issue of second-wife, unpredictable forces of nature, unfulfilled sexual desires, and mental and physical suffering. The paper delves into the intricate interplay of women’s emotions, highlighting their resilience and resistance. Ultimately, it underscores the pivotal role of Kajari songs as safety-valve for women in North Indian society.

Keywords: Folk songs, Safety-valve, Left-behind women, Therapeutic Impact, Emotional Identity.

Sustainable Development Goals: Gender Equality, Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

Citation: Chauhan, M. & Mishra, S. (2024). Kajari Folk Songs: Mechanism for Emotional Regulation. Rupkatha Journal 16:1. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v16n1.06g 

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