Indian Film Stars: New Critical Perspectives
By (Author) Michael Lawrence
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
BFI Publishing
28th May 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
791.430280922
Paperback
264
Width 189mm, Height 246mm
654g
Indian Film Stars offers original insights and important reappraisals of film stardom in India from the early talkie era of the 1930s to the contemporary period of global blockbusters. The collection represents a substantial intervention to our understanding of the development of film star cultures in India during the 20th and 21st centuries. The contributors seek to inspire and inform further inquiries into the histories of film stardomthe industrial construction and promotion of star personalities, the actual labouring and imagined lifestyles of professional stars, the stars relationship to specific aesthetic cinematic conventions (such as frontality and song-dance) and production technologies (such as the play-back system and post-synchronization), and audiences investment in and devotion to specific star bodiesacross the countrys multiple centres of film production and across the overlapping (and increasingly international) zones of the films distribution and reception. The star images, star bodies and star careers discussed are examined in relation to a wide range of issues, including the negotiation and contestation of tradition and modernity, the embodiment and articulation of both Indian and non-Indian values and vogues; the representation of gender and sexuality, of race and ethnicity, and of cosmopolitan mobility and transnational migration; innovations and conventions in performance style; the construction and transformation of public persona; the stars association with film studios and the mainstream media; the stars relationship with historical, political and cultural change and memory; and the stars meaning and value for specific (including marginalised) sectors of the audience.
In this remarkable exploration of Indian film stardom through embodied histories and social practices, rich local and regional details are woven into complex transnational circulations. This study reaffirms the stars place in the firmament of our devotion, but brings them back to earth as well. -- Nitin Govil, Associate Professor, School of Cinematic Arts, University of Southern California, USA.
Michael Lawrence is Reader in Film Studies at the University of Sussex, UK. He is the author of Sabu (BFI Publishing, 2014) and the co-editor, with Laura McMahon, of Animal Life and the Moving Image (BFI Publishing, 2015), and, with Karen Lury, of The Zoo and Screen Media: Images of Exhibition and Encounter (2016) and, with Rachel Tavenor, of Global Humanitarianism and Media Culture (2019).