HOME   
  |     ABOUT THE PRESS     |      BOOKS     |     NEWS AND EVENTS     |     CONTACT US     |   PERMISSIONS     |     SPECIAL OFFERS









Cinema India
Bookstore | Subject List | SUBJECT LIST: A - E (New Books Added Daily) | Asian Studies | Cinema India

Cinema India
Cinema India

Price: $24.00 


Subtitle: The Visual Culture of Hindi Film
Author: Rachel Dwyer and Divia Patel
Subject: Film Studies/Asian Studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3175-6
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-3174-8
Pages: 240 pp., 34 color illus., 88 b&w illus.
Description: A lively, fully illustrated book on the visual culture of Indian cinema

Praise for Cinema India

"[Dwyer and Patel] provide a compact historical survey of Hindi commercial cinema most widely distributed internationally. . . . Identifying the main elements of Hindi film as song, dance, romance, and action, Dwyer and Patel use 121 illustrations to trace how these elements changed from extremely melodramatic in the premodern era to more 'realistic' in the modern period as Indians' film-viewing tasted became more 'Westernized.' The authors theorize that the changes in film and film advertising style are tied to contemporary consumerism and that film advertising reflects the technological, economic, social, and political developments of India."-Choice

As the largest producer of films in the world, Indian cinema is both a major industry and a distinctive art form that permeates daily life in that country and shapes emerging global cultures elsewhere. While much has been written on the history of Indian cinema, its iconography and aesthetics have yet to be analyzed as reflections of national and cultural identities. In this important new work, Rachel Dwyer and Divia Patel focus on the development of Bombay-based commercial cinema since 1913, exploring the symbolic role of settings and costumes in staging the nation and the function of makeup and hairstyles in defining notions of beauty, sexuality, and consumption. The authors also examine how factors such as ethnicity, modernization, and Westernization impact reception of film along caste, region, language, and religious lines.

The economic influence of advertising in actually determining film content and the dissemination of its imagery are also discussed. Film studies scholars recently have begun to investigate advertising in the film industry and this book makes an important contribution to this emerging subfield in its engagement with Indian cinema and the impact of advertising on the culture at large.

Rachel Dwyer is senior lecturer in Indian studies at the School of Oriental and Asian Studies, University of London. She is the author of several books, including One Hundred Hindi Films and All You Want is Money, All You Need is Love: Sexuality and Romance in Modern India. Divia Patel is a curatorial assistant in the Indian and South-East Asian Department at the Victoria and Albert Museum.


Receive special offers and book notices by email. Sign up for RU READING?
Price: $24.00 





It's safe to shop at Rutgers. Please, read our privacy and security statement.
Copyright and Disclaimer © 2008 Rutgers University Press. Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey