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Title: Fusion music and fault lines in Shoaib Mansoor’s Khuda Kay Liye
Authors: Suhaan Kiran Mehta
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Citation: South Asian Popular Culture. - 2022. - Vol.20, No.2. - P.149 - 164
Abstract: This paper argues that while fusion music in Shoaib Mansoor’s film Khuda Kay Liye (KKL) (2007) serves to reclaim Pakistan’s South Asian heritage, there are moments in KKL when non-Muslim South Asians are othered. I examine these contradictory elements in the film with respect to two songs. I first look at ‘Bulleh Nu’, an anti-casteist ‘kafi’ attributed to the seventeenth/eighteenth century Sufi poet Baba Bulleh Shah, born in present-day Pakistani Punjab. I then contrast ‘Bulleh Nu’ with the film’s problematic representation of the Sikh as a ‘villainous’ other. Subsequently I analyze ‘Neer Bharan’, a ‘bandis ki thumri’ associated with the cosmopolitan ethos of the nineteenth century kingdom of Awadh, now located in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. Alongside my analysis of ‘Neer Bharan’, I write about how KKL only partially distances itself from the conflation of religious and national identities in Pakistan. The minoritization of non- Muslims from the subcontinent in the film is consistent with how they are represented in certain Pakistani educational and cultural texts. Therefore the desire to embrace Pakistan’s pluralistic tradi-tions in Khuda Kay Liye is juxtaposed with a relatively uncritical stance towards non-inclusive notions of citizenship.
URI: http://elib.hcmussh.edu.vn/handle/HCMUSSH/142758
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