Bengali cinema
Gooptu, Sharmistha:
Bengali cinema : 'an other nation' / Sharmistha Gooptu. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, 2011. - xiv, 231 S. : Ill. - (Routledge contemporary South Asia series ; 34)
ISBN 978-0-415-57006-0 / 0-415-57006-9 (Hardback)
ISBN 978-0-203-84334-5 (Ebook)
£ 85,00
DDC: 791.43095414
Beschreibung
Covering the years spanning cinema’s emergence as a popular form in Bengal in the first half of the twentieth century, this book examines the main genres and trends produced by this cinema, and leads up to Bengali cinema’s last phase of transition in the 1980s. Arguing that Bengali cinema has been a key economic and social institution, the author highlights that the Bengali filmic imaginary existed over and above the imaginary of the Indian nation.
This book argues that a definitive history of Bengali cinema presents an alternative understanding to the currently influential notion of the Hindi film as the ‘Indian’ or ‘national’ cinema. It suggests that the Bengali cinema presents a history which brings to the fore the deeply contested terrain of ‘national’ cinema, and shows the creation of the ‘alternative imaginary’ of the Bengali film. The author indicates that the case of the Bengali cinema demonstrates the emergence of a public domain that set up a definitive discourse of difference with respect to the ‘all-India’ Hindi film, popularly classified as Bollywood cinema, and which pre-empted its subsumption within the more pervasive culture of the Bombay Hindi cinema. As the first comprehensive historical work on Bengali cinema, this book makes a significant contribution to both Film and Cultural Studies and South Asian Studies in general. [Verlagsinformation]
Inhalt
Introduction
The Early Years
1. The Idea of a 'Bengali' Cinema
2. Bengal and a 'National' Cinema: New Theatres Ltd
3. The Transition to a 'Regional' Cinema
4. Bengali Love-Stories: Uttam-Suchitra and the Golden Era of Bengali Cinema
5. Common Man's Comedy: the Bhanu Factor
6. Satyajit Ray and the Bengali Cinema
7. Changing Context, New Texts: Bengali Cinema and Another Bengaliness
Epilogue
Autorin
SHARMISTHA GOOPTU is a founder and managing trustee of the South Asia Research Foundation (SARF), a not-for-profit research body based in India. SARF’s current project SAG (South Asian Gateway) is in partnership with Taylor and Francis, and involves the creation of what will be the largest South Asian digital database of historical materials. She is also the joint editor of the journal South Asian History and Culture (Routledge) and the Routledge South Asian History and Culture book series.
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