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The rhetoric of postcolonialism Indian middle cinema and the middle class in the 1990s /Ray, Radharani. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2001. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also from UMI Company.
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Historical realism : modes of modernity in Indian cinema, 1940-60Biswas, Moinak, 1961- January 2002 (has links)
Abstract not available
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Representations of women in Bollywood cinema : characterisation, songs, dance and dress in Yash Raj films from 1997 to 2007 / Nikita Ramkissoon.Ramkissoon, Nikita. January 2009 (has links)
This dissertation focuses on a content analysis through which representation of
women in Bollywood cinema is examined. Bollywood has been a major point of
reference for Indian culture in the last century and will undoubtedly persist for
years to come. To an extent, Bollywood has shaped the way in which people
read Indian culture as well as reflecting India's events, traditions, values and
customs by the mere fact that it is a pervasive and inescapable force in Indian
society. Women have been and to an extent still are represented as mere
wallpaper in Bollywood films. Issues around gender, gender-based violence,
femininity, women's rights and sexuality (outside of being a sexpot) are often
ignored and in most cases, subverted. Feminist discourse in the west has taken
this up in relation to Hollywood (cf. Mulvey, 1975; Kuhn, 1984; Kaplan, 2000)
however, discussions of gender in eastern cinema has yet to be fully developed.
Even though there is a body of work in this field (cf. Butalia, 1984; Datta, 2000)
there is room for far more in-depth investigation. This study explores the ways in
which women are represented and misrepresented in Bollywood cinema by
looking at the main features which make Bollywood what it is: the stock
characters, song and dance routines and elaborate dress. Each of these
elements is discussed by using one or two films to illustrate the formula that is
used in Bollywood cinema to undermine women. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009.
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Gendered representations in contemporary popular Hindi cinema : femininity and female sexuality in films by Pooja Bhatt and Karan Johar.Ramlutchman, Nisha. January 2006 (has links)
This dissertation focuses on a textual analysis of the representation of femininity
and female sexuality in popular Hindi cinema. Popular Hindi cinema has been a
major point of reference for Indian culture in the last century, and will
undoubtedly persist in the 21 st century. To an extent, Hindi cinema has shaped
and reflected the burgeoning transformation of a 'traditional India' to a 'modern
India'. (I use the term modern to reflect the impact the west has had on Indian
society, and how this impact in turn is reflected on screen). Issues surrounding
gender and sexuality tend to be avoided, if not subverted in Hindi cinema. More
specifically, issues surrounding femininity and female sexuality in Hindi cinema is
either not recognised or 'mis-recognised' on screen. Feminist studies, in relation
to film, have taken up these issues, to a large extent in the west (cf. Hollows,
2000; Kaplan, 2000; Macdonald, 1995). Chatterji (1998) maintains that the
interest of feminists in film began as a general concern for the underrepresentation
and mis-representation of women in cinema. This study explores
issues surrounding the 'presences' and 'absences' (as identified by Chatterji) in
the representations of female sexuality and femininity in popular Hindi cinema.
The project offers a comparative study of the films produced by two popular Hindi
cinema filmmakers. Pooja Bhatt's Jism (The Body) (January, 2003) is analysed in
comparison to Karan Johar's Kabhi Kushi Kabhi Gham (Sometimes happiness,
sometimes sadness) (November, 2000). The study compares, contrasts and
analyses the ways in which each of these films (and thus, how each filmmaker)
positions female sexuality and femininity in popular Hindi cinema.
Keywords: popular Hindi cinema, femininity, female sexuality, gender,
representation. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2006.
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The rhetoric of postcolonialism : Indian middle cinema and the middle class in the 1990sRay, Radharani 04 April 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Same-sex desire and syncretism : 'homosexualities' in Indian literature and filmRoss, Oliver Paul January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Diasporic consciousness and Bollywood : South African Indian youth and the meanings they make of Indian filmBoshoff, Priscilla January 2006 (has links)
A particular youth identity in the South African Indian diaspora is being forged in a nexus o flocal and global forces . The globalisation of Bollywood and its popularity as a global media and the international commodification of the Indian exotic have occurred at the same time as the valorisation of 'difference' in the local political landscape. Indian youth, as young members of the South African Indian diaspora, are inheritors both of a conservative - yet adaptable - home culture and the marginalised identities of apartheid. However, the tensions between their desire to be recognised as both 'modern' South Africans and as ' traditional ' Indians create a space in which they are able to (re)create for themselves an identity that can encompass both their home cultures and the desires of a Westernised modernity through the tropes of Bollywood. Bollywood speaks to its diasporic audiences through representations of an idealised 'traditional yet modern' India. Although India is not a place of return for this young generation, Bollywood representations of successful diasporic Indian culture and participation in the globalised Bollywood industry through concerts and international award ceremonies has provided an opportunity for young Indians in South Africa to re-examine their local Indian identities and feel invited to re-identify with the global diasporas of India.
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Postcolonial feminisms speaking through an 'accented' cinema : the construction of Indian women in the films of Mira Nair and Deepa Mehta.Moodley, Subeshini. January 2004 (has links)
This thesis proposes that the merging of the theories of ‘accented’ cinema and postcolonial feminisms allows for the establishment of a theoretical framework for the analysis of (what will be argued for) an emerging postcolonial feminist film practice. In An Accented Cinema: Exilic and Diasporic Filmmaking (2001), Hamid Naficy argues that even though the experiences of diaspora and exile differ from one person to the next, films produced by diasporic filmmakers exhibit similarities at various levels. These similarities, he says, arise as a result of a tension between a very distinct connection to the native country and the need to conform to the host society in which these filmmakers now live. Mira Nair and Deepa Mehta are women filmmakers of the Indian diaspora whose films depict Indian women – in comparison with their popular cinematic construction - in unconventional and controversial ways. These characters, at some crucial point in the films, transgress their oppressive nationalist representation through the reclaiming of their bodies and sexual identities. This similarity of construction in Nair and Mehta’s female protagonists, as a result, facilitates a filtering of postcolonial feminisms throughout the narrative of their films. Even though the postcolonial feminist writings of Chandra Talpade Mohanty (1991, 1994, 1997) and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (1990, 1994, 1996, 1999) do not relate directly to the study of film or cinematic practices, their works, specifically those regarding the construction, maintenance and perpetuation of nation and nationalism in postcolonial narratives, serve as a specifically gender-focused appropriation of Naficy’s theories. Mohanty and Spivak’s arguments surrounding the use of text and, particularly, narrative as tools for the representation and empowerment of Third world women, women of colour and subaltern women, work toward illustrating how postcolonial feminisms articulate through a specific moment of ‘accented’ filmmaking: that of women filmmakers of the Indian diaspora. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2004.
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Beyond appearances : transnationalism and representation of women in Bollywood cinemaAyob, Asma 11 1900 (has links)
Bollywood cinema continues to evolve. As a result, it has become a transnational/cultural role player for Indian audiences worldwide. There has always been a strong link between Bollywood cinema and Indian society. Over the years, it has contributed to the dialogue on women’s roles and position in Indian society. In the past, Bollywood filmmakers were faithful to representations of women who were bound by patriarchal structures in the sense that they were expected to be loyal to ancient Indian traditions and belief-systems. Based on the increase in Indian migration, contemporary Bollywood filmmakers are now catering to the demands of the Indian diaspora and therefore, a more global market. The impact of transnationalism on the representation of women in many Bollywood films has further added to the creation of open spaces for the Bollywood heroine. In this regard, the films of auteur director Karan Johar are valuable because they provide audiences with material that suggests re-thinking patriarchal structures in a transnational world.
This study will examine the representation of women in three selected films of Johar within the framework of feminist theory (Indian context). The impact that transnationalism has had on the Indian diaspora and the manner in which this translates into the narratives and representations of female characters in Bollywood films will be discussed. / Afrikaans & Theory of Literature / D. Litt. et Phil. (Theory of Literature)
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Beyond appearances : transnationalism and representation of women in Bollywood cinemaAyob, Asma 11 1900 (has links)
Bollywood cinema continues to evolve. As a result, it has become a transnational/cultural role player for Indian audiences worldwide. There has always been a strong link between Bollywood cinema and Indian society. Over the years, it has contributed to the dialogue on women’s roles and position in Indian society. In the past, Bollywood filmmakers were faithful to representations of women who were bound by patriarchal structures in the sense that they were expected to be loyal to ancient Indian traditions and belief-systems. Based on the increase in Indian migration, contemporary Bollywood filmmakers are now catering to the demands of the Indian diaspora and therefore, a more global market. The impact of transnationalism on the representation of women in many Bollywood films has further added to the creation of open spaces for the Bollywood heroine. In this regard, the films of auteur director Karan Johar are valuable because they provide audiences with material that suggests re-thinking patriarchal structures in a transnational world.
This study will examine the representation of women in three selected films of Johar within the framework of feminist theory (Indian context). The impact that transnationalism has had on the Indian diaspora and the manner in which this translates into the narratives and representations of female characters in Bollywood films will be discussed. / Afrikaans and Theory of Literature / D. Litt. et Phil. (Theory of Literature)
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