Colonial India and the Making of Empire Cinema: Image, Ideology and Identity
By (Author) Prem Chowdhry
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
4th May 2000
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Colonialism and imperialism
Cultural studies
791.430954
Paperback
304
Width 138mm, Height 216mm, Spine 17mm
390g
An empirico-historical inquiry into the empire cinema in Hollywood and Britain during the turbulent 1930s and 1940s. It shows how the empire cinema constructed the colonial world, its rationale for doing so, and the manner in which such constructions were received by the colonized people. Although empire cinema has been examined by western scholars, such studies have located the films almost wholly within the colonizing country rather that exploring their reception among the colonized. By shifting the emphasis to historical reception of imperial popular culture this book seeks to fill out a certain terrain between the current Indian writing on national cinema and non-Indian writing on empire cinema. Combining wide-ranging scholarship based on original documents, film, stuides and historical and political analyses, the book aims to give the reader a sense of how ideologies, images and identites are constructed, promoted, contested and resisted in relation to key film representations of empire. This book offers fresh insights in the field of cultural and film studies from a multi-focal perspective.
Prem Chowdhry works at the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, New Delhi