Description

Book Synopsis
With a focus on the responses of upwardly-mobile, yet lower-to-middle class urban women to state-sponsored entertainment serials, this title demonstrates how television in India has profoundly shaped women's place in the family, community, and nation, and the crucial role it has played in the realignment of class, caste, religion, and politics.

Trade Review
“An outstanding work by a brilliant and passionate scholar. Screening Culture, Viewing Politics is a rare jewel. Not only does Mankekar explore a key historical moment in India’s history, but she brings a vibrant feminist political critique to her understanding of the construction of the modern Indian state. This book will become a classic.”—Ann Gray, University of Birmingham
“In India, where nothing stands still, least of all, tradition, it is remarkable how the unwavering eye of Purnima Mankekar has studied the ceaseless working and reworking of the gendered anxieties of a nationalized, post-colonial, febrile middle under the flickering light of Doordharshan—India’s state run television. Screening Culture, Viewing Politics is a must for anyone interested in culture in the broadest and most fecund sense of that term.”—E. Valentine Daniel, author of Charred Lullabies: Chapters in an Anthropography of Violence
“Purnima Mankekar has crafted a compelling and richly informed account of one of the most difficult of anthropological topics: the power of television to turn local and gendered intimacies into—literally—gripping allegories of national identity. Fusing scholarship and elegance in an exceptionally accessible narrative, she attends to audiences as well as texts. In this way, she provides an exemplary demonstration of how superb ethnography can best disentangle the actual complexities behind the usual cant about modernity, nationalism, and the media.”—Michael Herzfeld, author of Portrait of a Greek Imagination

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
1. Culture Wars 1
Part 1: Fields of Power: The National Television Family
2. National Television and the “Viewing Family” 45
3. “Women-Oriented” Narratives and the New Indian Woman 104
Part II: Engendering Communities
4. Mediating Modernities: The Ramayan and the Creation of Community and Nation 165
5. Television Tales, National Narratives, and a Woman’s Rage: Multiple Interpretations of Draupadi’s “Disrobing” 224
Part III: Technologies of Violence
6. “Air Force Women Don’t Cry”: Militaristic Nationalism and Representations of Gender 259
7. Popular Narrative, the Politics of Location, and Memory 289
Epilogue: Sky Wars 335
Notes 359
Bibliography 395
Index 417

Screening Culture Viewing Politics An

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    A Paperback / softback by Purnima Mankekar

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      View other formats and editions of Screening Culture Viewing Politics An by Purnima Mankekar

      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 10/12/1999
      ISBN13: 9780822323907, 978-0822323907
      ISBN10: 0822323907

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      With a focus on the responses of upwardly-mobile, yet lower-to-middle class urban women to state-sponsored entertainment serials, this title demonstrates how television in India has profoundly shaped women's place in the family, community, and nation, and the crucial role it has played in the realignment of class, caste, religion, and politics.

      Trade Review
      “An outstanding work by a brilliant and passionate scholar. Screening Culture, Viewing Politics is a rare jewel. Not only does Mankekar explore a key historical moment in India’s history, but she brings a vibrant feminist political critique to her understanding of the construction of the modern Indian state. This book will become a classic.”—Ann Gray, University of Birmingham
      “In India, where nothing stands still, least of all, tradition, it is remarkable how the unwavering eye of Purnima Mankekar has studied the ceaseless working and reworking of the gendered anxieties of a nationalized, post-colonial, febrile middle under the flickering light of Doordharshan—India’s state run television. Screening Culture, Viewing Politics is a must for anyone interested in culture in the broadest and most fecund sense of that term.”—E. Valentine Daniel, author of Charred Lullabies: Chapters in an Anthropography of Violence
      “Purnima Mankekar has crafted a compelling and richly informed account of one of the most difficult of anthropological topics: the power of television to turn local and gendered intimacies into—literally—gripping allegories of national identity. Fusing scholarship and elegance in an exceptionally accessible narrative, she attends to audiences as well as texts. In this way, she provides an exemplary demonstration of how superb ethnography can best disentangle the actual complexities behind the usual cant about modernity, nationalism, and the media.”—Michael Herzfeld, author of Portrait of a Greek Imagination

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments ix
      1. Culture Wars 1
      Part 1: Fields of Power: The National Television Family
      2. National Television and the “Viewing Family” 45
      3. “Women-Oriented” Narratives and the New Indian Woman 104
      Part II: Engendering Communities
      4. Mediating Modernities: The Ramayan and the Creation of Community and Nation 165
      5. Television Tales, National Narratives, and a Woman’s Rage: Multiple Interpretations of Draupadi’s “Disrobing” 224
      Part III: Technologies of Violence
      6. “Air Force Women Don’t Cry”: Militaristic Nationalism and Representations of Gender 259
      7. Popular Narrative, the Politics of Location, and Memory 289
      Epilogue: Sky Wars 335
      Notes 359
      Bibliography 395
      Index 417

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