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Results 69211-69214 of 69214 (Search time: 0.045 seconds).
  • Article


  • Authors: Sarita K. Heer (2022)

  • Social Psychologist Michael defines banal nationalism as ordinary iconographies communicating a sense of nation and permeating daily existence (8). Postage stamps are vehicles of banal national-ism, as they are ephemeral and small government-issued items that seem innocuous. However, the images chosen to be on postage stamps are carefully considered and chosen, and commonly reflect the ideologies of the dominant political party at the time of pro-duction. Yet many citizens do not take the time to contemplate why a certain image has been produced on this medium of government authority. In my paper I will unpack the Bharatiya Janata Party’s philosophy and rise to power in 2014 and then discuss how postage stamps issued in 2017, specifically the series on Indian food, reflects the part...

  • Article


  • Authors: Rahul Sen (2022)

  • This essay examines the stardom of Ranveer Singh in the light of Queer Theory. In the last decade, Ranveer Singh has established himself as the superstar of the Bombay film industry. Not only has he acted in a range of challenging films, thereby proving his versa-tility as an actor, his quirky sense of clothing and style, as well as his eccentric personality and over the top public gestures, have been subject to endless public conversations and debates. In this essay, I argue, that Ranveer Singh’s aesthetics – both, on-screen and off- screen – mirror an aesthetics of queerness that militate against the normative expectations of a male star in the Bombay film industry. The characters that he plays on screen, his fashion, as well as his public conduct, together, are responsible for ...

  • Article


  • Authors: Mohammed Shafeeq; Zeenath Mohamed Kunhi (2022)

  • Spatiality and the spatial turn in cultural studies and media theory have critically influenced academic dialogues and the analysis of texts in contemporary discourses. In this context, the paper attempts to apply the discourse of spatiality to read into the family spaces in the New Generation Malayalam film narratives, holding the view that diegetic spaces in these films, directly and indirectly, attempt at foregrounding and subverting the normalisation of reproductive heteronormativity which had resulted in the gen-dered storytelling practices. To engage critically with the category of diegetic spatiality, two representational New Generation Malayalam films, Bangalore Days(2014) and Kumbalangi Nights (2019) are explored.

  • Article


  • Authors: Sudha Tiwari (2022)

  • Year 2021–22 was celebrated as the birth centenary of Satyajit Ray. The Film Finance Corporation (FFC) and National Film Development Corporation (NFDC) were two of his important financiers and pro-ducers. Ray’s Charulata (1964), Nayak (1965), and Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne (1968) were financed by the FFC. NFDC produced some of his later films, viz. Ghare Baire (1984), Ganashatru (1989), and Agantuk (1992). This article remembers Ray by recalling the Corporation’s support towards and celebration of the Master’s films. It revisits Ray’s views on Indian films, New Cinema movement of the 1970s, and films and audience in general with a view to highlight his curious relationship with the alternative cinema movement of India.