ABSTRACT

This book examines cinematic practices in Bollywood as narratives that assist in shaping the imagination of the age, especially in contemporary India. It examines historical films released in India since the new millennium and analyses cinema as a reflection of the changing socio-political and economic conditions at any given period. The chapters in Historicizing Myths in Contemporary India: Cinematic Representations and Nationalist Agendas in Hindi Cinemas also illuminate different perspectives on how cinematic historical representations follow political patterns and market compulsions, giving precedence to a certain past over the other, creating a narrative suited for the dominant narrative of the present. From Mughal-e-Azam to Padmaavat, and Bajirao Mastani to Raazi, the chapters show how creating history out of myths validate hegemonic identities in a rapidly evolving Indian society.

The volume will be of interest to scholars of film and media studies, literature and culture studies, and South Asian studies.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|20 pages

Of War and Intrigue

“Medieval” as Represented on Indian Screen

chapter 2|23 pages

Humayun and Mughal-E-Azam

History and the Contemporary

chapter 3|17 pages

Re-Texturing the Past

The Digital Image and the Contemporary Bollywood Historical

chapter 4|21 pages

The Gender of War

National Masculinities and Hindutva in Bollywood War Cinema

chapter 5|21 pages

“The Surgical Strike that shook The Mughal Empire”

Evacuation and Distortion of Histories in Contemporary Hindi Screen Cultures

chapter 6|9 pages

Raazi (2018)

Spying for the Nation

chapter 7|16 pages

History Into Myth

Popular Hindi Cinema and the Politics of “True Stories”

chapter 8|15 pages

Bahujan Legend, Brahmanical Telling

Decoding the Lens of Tanhaji: The Unsung Warrior

chapter 9|21 pages

Cultural Hegemony or Modernity?

Pakistani Response to Bollywood's Saffron Myth-Making

chapter 10|22 pages

“A Great Republic of Hurt Sentiments”

Counter-Histories, Nationalism, and the Controversy of the Historical