Bowman, Paul ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2264-7596
2025.
Somacoloniality: three figures of embodied postcolonial affect (Indian clubs, gadas, and heavy clubs).
Asian Journal of Sport History & Culture
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Abstract
This work engages the visual embodied and affective afterlives of three forms of British Imperial era ‘Indian Clubs’. Indian clubs are a broad family of exercise tools: some are of ancient Indian and Persian origin, others modified and modernised by the British military in India through the 18th and 19th centuries. The work focuses first on the pairs of small clubs that the British standardised; second, on the gada (or mace), a long staff with a weighted end; and third, ‘heavy clubs’, which can take many forms and have many different names (mugdar [Sanskrit], meel [Persian], karla kattai [Tamil], etc.). The work explores these three different tools and traces three different ‘figures’: 1) the coloniser; 2) the anticolonial-precolonial; and 3) the mythic transhistorical ‘noble savage’. The work analyses both the visual semiotics and embodied affect (or soma-semiotics) of each of these figures/practices and argues that they each activate different affects and hence different immanent postcolonial ideological trajectories.
| Item Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Status: | In Press |
| Schools: | Schools > Journalism, Media and Culture |
| Publisher: | Taylor and Francis Group |
| ISSN: | 2769-0148 |
| Date of First Compliant Deposit: | 22 October 2025 |
| Date of Acceptance: | 15 October 2025 |
| Last Modified: | 23 Oct 2025 13:30 |
| URI: | https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/181829 |
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