Reading the Muslim on celluloid : bollywood, representation and politics / Roshni Sengupta.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Delhi : Primus Books, 2020.ISBN:- 9789389850871
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 791.430954 SE-R (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 149793 |
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791.430954 RE- ReFocus : the films of Shyam Benegal / | 791.430954 RO-C Cinema of enchantment : Perso-Arabic genealogies of the Hindi masala film / | 791.430954 SE-H Haunting Bollywood : gender, genre, and the supernatural in Hindi commercial cinema / | 791.430954 SE-R Reading the Muslim on celluloid : bollywood, representation and politics / | 791.430954 SH-K Kumar Shahani the shock of desire and other essays | 791.430954 SO-T Talking cinema : conversations with actors and film-makers / | 791.430954 SO-T Talking cinema : conversations with actors and filmmakers / |
"While Bollywood continues to be part of the psyche of Indians and South Asians the world over, the complex question of how religious and sectarian identities are represented has emerged as crucial. The cinematic representation of identities, particularly of the Muslim as a cultural category, also contains within ideas about visualities and their impact. As identities are redefined in the context of extremist ideologies, the advent of religious nationalism aids and abets such redefinitions. The contribution of cinema to ideological milieu is immense. Hindi cinema—through its romantic narratives and culture of myth-making as well as the capital-intensive, industrial nature of production tended to be one of the most powerful tools of political communication and propaganda. This book aims to bring cinematic narratives under the analytical lens and contextually the representation of the Muslim in popular Hindi cinema. It also argues in favour of a noticeable transformation in the representation of Muslims in films through the 1990s and 2000s, culminating in the emergence of a secularized portrayal which is far from unproblematic. Can one discern an attempt to construct a visual binary where the Muslims can be categorized as ‘good’ and ‘bad’? does Hindi cinema perceive the Muslim only through a simplified world view of loyalty and nationalism? This book seeks to answer such questions."--
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