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Popular cinema in Bengal : genre, stars, public cultures

Contributor(s): Language: English Series: Routledge South Asian History and Culture Series | / edited by David Washbrook ...[et al.]Publication details: Routledge 2020 LondonDescription: x, 253pISBN:
  • 9780367330828
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 791.430954 P819
Summary: Popular Cinema in Bengal marks a decisive turn in studies of Bengali language cinema by shifting the focus from auteur and text-based studies to exhaustive readings of the film industry. The book covers a wide range of themes and issues, including: generic tropes (like comedy and action); iconic figurations (of the detective and the city); (female) stars such as Kanan Bala, Sadhana Bose and Aparna Sen; intensities of public debates (subjects of high and low cultures, taste, viewership, gender and sexuality); print cultures (including posters, magazines and song-booklets); cinematic spaces; and trans-media and trans-cultural traffic. By locating cinema within the crosscurrents of geo-political transformations, the book highlights the new and persuasive research that has materialised over the last decade. The authors raise pertinent questions regarding 'regional' cinema as a category, in relation to 'national' cinema models, and trace the non-linear journey of the popular via multiple (media) trajectories. They address subjects of physicality, sexuality and its representations, industrial change, spaces of consumption, and cinema’s meandering directions through global circuits and low-end networks. Highlighting the ever-changing contours of cinema in Bengal in all its popular forms and proposing a new historiography, Popular Cinema in Bengal will be of great interest to scholars of film studies and South-Asian popular culture. The chapters were originally published in the journal South Asian History and Culture.
List(s) this item appears in: New arrival May 09 to 15, 2022
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur General Stacks 791.430954 P819 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available A185695
Total holds: 0
Browsing PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur shelves, Collection: General Stacks Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
791.430954 G562I INDIAN POPULAR CINEMA 791.430954 G646C CINEMA OF INTERRUPTIONS 791.430954 P213p Popular hindi cinema 791.430954 P819 Popular cinema in Bengal 791.430954 R126s Seduced by the familiar 791.430954 Si64c Cinema, transnationalism, and colonial India 791.430954 V449m The melodramatic public

Popular Cinema in Bengal marks a decisive turn in studies of Bengali language cinema by shifting the focus from auteur and text-based studies to exhaustive readings of the film industry.

The book covers a wide range of themes and issues, including: generic tropes (like comedy and action); iconic figurations (of the detective and the city); (female) stars such as Kanan Bala, Sadhana Bose and Aparna Sen; intensities of public debates (subjects of high and low cultures, taste, viewership, gender and sexuality); print cultures (including posters, magazines and song-booklets); cinematic spaces; and trans-media and trans-cultural traffic. By locating cinema within the crosscurrents of geo-political transformations, the book highlights the new and persuasive research that has materialised over the last decade. The authors raise pertinent questions regarding 'regional' cinema as a category, in relation to 'national' cinema models, and trace the non-linear journey of the popular via multiple (media) trajectories. They address subjects of physicality, sexuality and its representations, industrial change, spaces of consumption, and cinema’s meandering directions through global circuits and low-end networks.

Highlighting the ever-changing contours of cinema in Bengal in all its popular forms and proposing a new historiography, Popular Cinema in Bengal will be of great interest to scholars of film studies and South-Asian popular culture. The chapters were originally published in the journal South Asian History and Culture.

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