Hindi Cinema: Repeating the Subject

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Routledge, May 7, 2013 - Social Science - 232 pages

Hindi Cinema is full of instances of repetition of themes, narratives, plots and characters. By looking at 60 years of Hindi cinema, this book focuses on the phenomenon as a crucial thematic and formal code that is problematic when representing the national and cinematic subject. It reflects on the cinema as motivated by an ongoing crisis of self-formation in modern India.

The book looks at how cinema presents liminal and counter-modern identities emerging within repeated modern attempts to re-enact traumatic national events so as to redeem the past and restore a normative structure to happenings. Establishing structure and event as paradigmatic poles of a historical and anthropological spectrum for the individual in society, the book goes on to discuss cinematic portrayals of violence, gender embodiment, religion, economic transformations and new globalised Indianness as events and sites of liminality disrupting structural aspirations.

After revealing the impossibility of accurate representation of incommensurable and liminal subjects within the historiography of the nation-state, the book highlights how Hindi cinema as an ongoing engagement with the nation-state as a site of eventfulness draws attention to the problematic nature of the thematic of nation. It is a useful study for academics of Film Studies and South Asian Culture.

 

Contents

List of figures
Structure event and liminal practices in recent Hindi films
Imagining the past in the present Violence gender and citizenship in Hindi
The man formerly known as the actor When Shah Rukh Khan reappeared
Romancing religion Bollywoods painless globalization
Love triangles at home and abroad Male embodiment as queer enactment
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Copyright

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About the author (2013)

Nandini Bhattacharya is Professor of English and affiliate of Film, Women’s Studies and Africana Studies programs at Texas A&M University, USA. Her interests include South Asia, Postcoloniality, Cinema, Gender and Transnationalism.

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