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Mourning the Nation – Indian Cinema in the Wake of Partition
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Mourning the Nation – Indian Cinema in the Wake of Partition Paperback - 2009

by Sarkar, Bhaskar

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  • Paperback

Description

Duke Univ Pr, 2009. Paperback. New. 384 pages. 9.75x6.00x1.00 inches.
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Details

  • Title Mourning the Nation – Indian Cinema in the Wake of Partition
  • Author Sarkar, Bhaskar
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition First Edition
  • Condition New
  • Pages 384
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Duke Univ Pr, DURHAM, NC
  • Date 2009
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Bookseller's Inventory # __0822344114
  • ISBN 9780822344117 / 0822344114
  • Weight 1.33 lbs (0.60 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.25 x 6.13 x 0.8 in (23.50 x 15.57 x 2.03 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects India - History - Partition, 1947, Motion pictures - India
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2008052621
  • Dewey Decimal Code 791.436

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From the publisher

What remains of the "national" when the nation unravels at the birth of the independent state? The political truncation of India at the end of British colonial rule in 1947 led to a social cataclysm in which roughly one million people died and ten to twelve million were displaced. Combining film studies, trauma theory, and South Asian cultural history, Bhaskar Sarkar follows the shifting traces of this event in Indian cinema over the next six decades. He argues that Partition remains a wound in the collective psyche of South Asia and that its representation on screen enables forms of historical engagement that are largely opaque to standard historiography.

Sarkar tracks the initial reticence to engage with the trauma of 1947 and the subsequent emergence of a strong Partition discourse, revealing both the silence and the eventual "return of the repressed" as strands of one complex process. Connecting the relative silence of the early decades after Partition to a project of postcolonial nation-building and to trauma's disjunctive temporal structure, Sarkar develops an allegorical reading of the silence as a form of mourning. He relates the proliferation of explicit Partition narratives in films made since the mid-1980s to disillusionment with post-independence achievements, and he discusses how current cinematic memorializations of 1947 are influenced by economic liberalization and the rise of a Hindu-chauvinist nationalism. Traversing Hindi and Bengali commercial cinema, art cinema, and television, Sarkar provides a history of Indian cinema that interrogates the national (a central category organizing cinema studies) and participates in a wider process of mourning the modernist promises of the nation form.

About the author

Bhaskar Sarkar is an assistant professor of film studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara.