Bollywood's India : : A Public Fantasy / / Priya Joshi.

Bollywood is India's most popular entertainment and one of its most powerful social forces. Its blockbusters contest ideas about state formation, capture the nation's dispersed anxieties, and fabricate public fantasies of what constitutes "India." Written by an award-winning scho...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Asian Studies Contemporary Collection eBook Package
VerfasserIn:
Place / Publishing House:New York, NY : : Columbia University Press, , [2015]
©2015
Year of Publication:2015
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (216 p.) :; ‹B›45 b&w photographs‹/B›
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Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
List of Illustrations and Tables --
Acknowledgments --
Preface. The Social Work Of Cinema --
1. Bollywood's India --
2. Cinema as Public Fantasy --
3. Cinema as Family Romance --
4. Bollywood, Bollylite --
Epilogue: Anthem for a New India --
Notes --
Filmography --
Bibliography --
Index
Summary:Bollywood is India's most popular entertainment and one of its most powerful social forces. Its blockbusters contest ideas about state formation, capture the nation's dispersed anxieties, and fabricate public fantasies of what constitutes "India." Written by an award-winning scholar of popular culture and postcolonial modernity, Bollywood's India analyzes the role of the cinema's most popular blockbusters in making, unmaking, and remaking modern India. With dazzling interpretive virtuosity, Priya Joshi provides an interdisciplinary account of popular cinema as a space that filters politics and modernity for its viewers. Themes such as crime and punishment, family and individuality, vigilante and community capture the diffuse aspirations of an evolving nation. Summoning India's tumultuous 1970s as an interpretive lens, Joshi reveals the cinema's social work across decades that saw the decline of studios, the rise of the multi-starrer genre, and the arrival of corporate capital and new media platforms. In elegantly crafted studies of iconic and less familiar films, including Awara (1951), Ab Dilli Dur Nahin (1957), Deewaar (1975), Sholay (1975), Dil Se (1998), A Wednesday (2008), and 3 Idiots (2009), Joshi powerfully conveys the pleasures and politics of Bollywood blockbusters.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780231539074
9783110649826
9783110665864
DOI:10.7312/josh16960
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Priya Joshi.