ABSTRACT

The field of Bollywood studies has remained predominantly critical, theoretical and historical in focus. This book brings together qualitative and quantitative approaches to tackle empirical questions focusing on the relationship between soft power, hybridity, cinematic texts, and audiences.

Adopting a critical-transcultural framework that examines the complex power relations that are manifested through globalized production and consumption practices, the book approaches the study of popular Hindi cinema from three broad perspectives: transcultural production contexts, content trends, and audiences. It firstly outlines the theoretical issues relevant to the spread of popular Indian cinema and emergence of India’s growing soft power. The book goes on to report on a series of quantitative studies that examine the patterns of geographical, cultural, political, infrastructural, and artistic power dynamics at work within the highest-grossing popular Hindi films over a 61-year period since independence. Finally, an additional set of studies are presented that quantitatively examine Indian and North American audience consumption practices.

The book illuminates issues related to the actualization and maintenance of cinematic soft power dynamics, highlighting Bollywood’s increasing integration into and subsumption by globalized practices that are fundamentally altering India’s cinematic landscape and, thus, its unique soft power potential. It is of interest to academics working in Film Studies, Globalisation Studies, and International Relations.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Bollywood and globalization: researching popular Hindi cinema through the lens of film flows

part 1|48 pages

Transcultural contexts and soft power

chapter 1|14 pages

The big stick behind “soft power”?

The case of Indian films in international markets 1

chapter 2|15 pages

Bollywood at large

Who is watching Bollywood films? 1

chapter 3|17 pages

Transnational elements in the Hong Kong and Hindi film industries

A comparative analysis 1

part 2|66 pages

Cinematic content and soft power

chapter 4|17 pages

Box office and “Bollywood”

An analysis of soft power content in popular Hindi cinema 1

chapter 5|12 pages

Cinematic soft power and contraflows

The prevalence of South Asian culture and art in popular Hindi cinema 1

part 3|54 pages

Cinematic soft power and audiences

chapter 8|17 pages

Bollywood cinema and contemporary audiences

Surveying viewer perceptions and practices 1

chapter 9|21 pages

Cultural connections in a globalized world

The power of Bollywood in the United States 1

chapter 10|14 pages

Emotional arousal and Bollywood

Assessing cortical activation for violent, sexual, and romantic content in popular Hindi cinema 1