BHARAT MATA, MELODRAMA AND THE MEDIATION OF THE NATIONAL SUBJECT (original) (raw)

The Life and Times of Bharat Mata Nationalism as Invented Religion

2006

MANUSHI The image of the suffering mother, found in these lines from the popular Hindi novel, Maila Anchal, is undoubtedly the most central among those visualisations which have shaped and reshaped national identities, spanning both preand postcolonial India. As we see in the abovequoted example, the crucial aspect of this image of the nation as body is that the body involved is neither anonymous nor abstract. It is a familiar one, revered and adored, one which evokes profound memories, and one which, at this narrative moment, is in grave distress. Even in deep pain, this body commands respect. What is also worth pointing out is that this body is presented as perishable, in the most literal sense of the word. We have a number of instances where the anthropomorphic form of the nation, Bharat Mata, has been shown along with India’s cartographic form, its map. A popular wall calendar of the Hindu right wing organisation, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) is one such example (see fi...

Whose Mother (land)?: Visualising and Theorising National Identity

This paper makes two related arguments. The first of these is that by and large, narrations of the nation have a melodramatic structure. The second is that, the iconic and mythogenic figuring of the nation as Mother India/Bharat Mata, contrary to enduring assumptions about it, is, strictly speaking, not a ‘national’ one at all. To do the above, the paper will critically review the relations between a) melodrama, gender, the organisation of sexuality, the family and the nation; b) The principle of maternality, the maternal body and nation. c) It will examine the ways in which central symbols of the national iconography of Mother India/ Bharat Mata have been deployed and reviewed

From Mother India to Mother Ireland: Objectifying the Worshipped through Nationalist Rhetoric in Satyajit Ray's Ghare Baire and Neil Jordan's Michael Collins

Oray's Publication, 2023

The concept of femininizing the nation has been an all-pervasive theme in the domain of nationalism. This is nowhere more explicitly visible than in the anti-colonial nationalism breeding in the ground of the British colonies like India, Ireland, South Asia and Africa. This paper tries to highlight the limitations of such apparent glorification and idealization of women with the perpetual imagery of a benevolent mother or devout wife. It also tries to systematically unfold the mechanism behind such masculinist creation of capturing the female body within nationalist rhetoric and metaphors. This paper is precisely an exploration of the unsurmountable gap between the masculinist discourse of idealization and the corporeal experiences of the real mothers, wives and daughters vis-à-vis Indian and Irish Nationalism. It will also highlight with special reference to Satyajit Ray’s Ghare Baire and Neil Jordan’s Michael Collins the tendency of delimiting the women characters with a quintessential frigidity and passivity in the cinematic representations while treating the motif of nationalism.

Nationalism Refigured-Contemporary South Indian Cinema and the Subject of Feminism

Subaltern Studies XI , 2000

A new nationalism is in the air today, a nationalism suffused with romantic love, with the most intimate and ‘private’ of emotions. Popular cinema in India draws our attention to this phenomenon: Roja (1992), for example, is advertised as ‘a patriotic love story’, and one of the more successful films of 1994 was called 1942: A Love Story. This nationalism appears to be premised on a detaching of the new middle class from the Nehruvian state of the post-Independence years, a process that has led to changes in the meaning of some of the key terms in our political life, such as ‘secularism’, for example. It is almost as if the hitherto hidden logic of the national-modern is now acquiring visibility owing to a new configuration of forces which include the rise of the Sangh Parivar and the liberalization of the Indian economy. The portrayal of ‘mainstream’ characters—unexceptional, not particularly ‘heroic’—in commercial cinema provides one point of access to this complex configuration. Central to the shift in the national imaginary, as I shall show, is the figure of woman. In this negotiation of the new modernity, the woman is not presented as just a passive counter; rather, her agency is shown as crucial for the shifts that are taking place.

Nari Shakti and the Nation : Visual Imagery and Mediation of 'India's New Daughters' in the Framework of Muscular Patriotism

Conference Publication: How to Live Together? Circulatory Practices and Contested Spaces in India. ed. by Fritzi-Marie Titzmann & Nadja-Christina Schneider, 2022

Especially the physically trained bodies of young women are imagined and visually represented as enabling them to ‘defend’ themselves - but also the ‘body’ of the national territory - against the violent attacks of an imagined Other, within as well as outside India. It is particularly striking that the ‘new daughters of the nation’ seem to be paradigmatically embodied and visually mediated through emerging symbolic figures such as the female athlete, police officer or Indian Air Force pilot. These visual mediations of India’s ‘empowered daughters’ are increasingly circulated across different media platforms and networks, ranging from global streaming services, such as Netflix or the Hindi film industry, to local print and online media. While some viewers may immediately associate these visualizations with a variety of globally circulating images of female air force pilots, others may also be reminded of earlier iconic examples of ‘women in command’ in South and Southeast Asia.

Visual Grandeur, Imagined Glory: Identity Politics and Hindu Nationalism in Bajirao Mastani and Padmaavat

Journal of Religion and Film, 2018

This paper examines the tropes through which the Hindi (Bollywood) historical films Bajirao Mastani (2015) and Padmaavat (2018) create idealised pasts on screen that speak to Hindu nationalist politics of present-day India. Bajirao Mastani is based on a popular tale of love, between Bajirao I (1700-1740), a powerful Brahmin general, and Mastani, daughter of a Hindu king and his Iranian mistress. The relationship was socially disapproved because of Mastani`s mixed parentage. The film distorts India`s pluralistic heritage by idealising Bajirao as an embodiment of Hindu nationalism and portraying Islam as inimical to Hinduism. Padmaavat is a film about a legendary (Hindu) Rajput queen coveted by the Muslim emperor Alauddin Khilji (ruled from 1296-1316). Alauddin was a historical character. Padmavati is not mentioned in any historical sources. But the legend has been viewed as history and used for political mobilisation of Hindus during the colonial era.The film projects a Manichean nar...