The article discusses a film by Deepa Mehta, a filmmaker who is a part of the so-called Indian Parallel Cinema, and a critic of Indian culture and society. The main argument of the article is that in the landmark film Earth, Mehta portrays a character to personify the idea of Mother India. Mehta’s vision of Mother India is rendered psychoanalytically as being raped by her sons—something that had started during the partition of India and continues till our times. The article introduces and re-thinks categories of Indianness, rape, alienness, which are vital to our understanding of contemporary Indian culture and society. One of the main operating categories of the article is identity—what it means in our modern times, and what it means to lo...
Laleh Habib reports on a recent talk by Dr Sunera Thobani at LSE’s Gender Institute
The world and its ways are always changing. This rapid change sometimes result indeterioration of va...
Male supremacy and patriarchy has become two clichéd words, but it is a fact that these two words de...
In this thesis, I will analyze literary and cinematic representations of sexual violence during Part...
This article focuses on Fire (1996) and Water (2005), two films directed by Deepa Mehta that present...
This article revisits the controversy surrounding Deepa Mehta’s Fire (1996), India’s first publicly-...
This thesis examines Deepa Mehta’s trilogy—Water, Earth, Fire—and the trilogy’s exploration and cont...
The paper presents an analysis of Deepa Mehta’s film trilogy (Water, Fire, Earth) through the concep...
The purpose of this article is to explore the connection between Indian nationalism and gender ident...
The article examines the way in which the historical event of the Partition of India on the 15th of ...
This article revisits the controversy surrounding Deepa Mehta's Fire (1996), India's first publicly ...
This thesis explores the ways in which cinema’s in India have articulated the idea of the Indian Nat...
<p>This article attempts to map out the changing image of biological family as the central axis of c...
Visual culture investigates how the culture is expressed in visual images and analyses the influence...
From ancient days to the present, casteist ideologies of Hindu society slacken the progress of human...
Laleh Habib reports on a recent talk by Dr Sunera Thobani at LSE’s Gender Institute
The world and its ways are always changing. This rapid change sometimes result indeterioration of va...
Male supremacy and patriarchy has become two clichéd words, but it is a fact that these two words de...
In this thesis, I will analyze literary and cinematic representations of sexual violence during Part...
This article focuses on Fire (1996) and Water (2005), two films directed by Deepa Mehta that present...
This article revisits the controversy surrounding Deepa Mehta’s Fire (1996), India’s first publicly-...
This thesis examines Deepa Mehta’s trilogy—Water, Earth, Fire—and the trilogy’s exploration and cont...
The paper presents an analysis of Deepa Mehta’s film trilogy (Water, Fire, Earth) through the concep...
The purpose of this article is to explore the connection between Indian nationalism and gender ident...
The article examines the way in which the historical event of the Partition of India on the 15th of ...
This article revisits the controversy surrounding Deepa Mehta's Fire (1996), India's first publicly ...
This thesis explores the ways in which cinema’s in India have articulated the idea of the Indian Nat...
<p>This article attempts to map out the changing image of biological family as the central axis of c...
Visual culture investigates how the culture is expressed in visual images and analyses the influence...
From ancient days to the present, casteist ideologies of Hindu society slacken the progress of human...
Laleh Habib reports on a recent talk by Dr Sunera Thobani at LSE’s Gender Institute
The world and its ways are always changing. This rapid change sometimes result indeterioration of va...
Male supremacy and patriarchy has become two clichéd words, but it is a fact that these two words de...