Indian Horror Cinema
eBook - ePub

Indian Horror Cinema

(En)gendering the Monstrous

  1. 314 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Indian Horror Cinema

(En)gendering the Monstrous

About this book

This book studies the hitherto overlooked genre of horror cinema in India. It uncovers some unique and diverse themes that these films deal with, including the fear of the unknown, the supernatural, occult practices, communication with spirits of the deceased, ghosts, reincarnation, figures of vampires, zombies, witches and transmutations of human beings into non-human forms such as werewolves. It focusses on the construction of feminine and masculine subjectivities in select horror films across seven major languages – Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Bangla, Marathi and Malayalam.

The author shows that the alienation of the body and bodily functions through the medium of the horror film serves to deconstruct stereotypes of caste, class, gender and anthropocentrism. Some riveting insights emerge thus, such as the masculinist undertow of the possession narrative and how complex structures of resistance accompany the anxieties of culture via the dread of laughter.

This original account of Indian cinematic history is accessible yet strongly analytical and includes an exhaustive filmography. The book will interest scholars and researchers in film studies, media and cultural studies, art, popular culture and performance, literature, gender, sociology, South Asian studies, practitioners, filmmakers as well as cinephiles.

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Yes, you can access Indian Horror Cinema by Mithuraaj Dhusiya in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Media & Performing Arts & Film & Video. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Acknowledgements
  6. Introduction: horror in Indian cinema: an afterthought?
  7. 1 The masculinist economy of possession narratives
  8. 2 Vampirism as structures of resistance
  9. 3 The ghastly gendered narrative of animal transformation
  10. 4 Zombies and witches and the anxieties of culture
  11. 5 Do we fear laughter? The genre of horror-comedy
  12. 6 There are no ghosts, only ghostly tales: Indian horror and the ‘uncanny’
  13. Epilogue: fear, are we there yet?
  14. Appendix: annotated filmography of horror films in India
  15. Glossary
  16. Bibliography
  17. Filmography
  18. Index