Results for ' Popular Indian Cinema'

968 found
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  1.  89
    Towards Another '–Image': Deleuze, Narrative Time and Popular Indian Cinema.David Martin-Jones - 2008 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 2 (1):25-48.
    Popular Indian cinema provides a test case for examining the limitations of Gilles Deleuze's categories of movement-image and time-image. Due to the context-specific aesthetic and cultural traditions that inform popular Indian cinema, although it appears at times to be both movement- and time-image, it actually creates a different type of image. Analysis of Toofani Tarzan (1936) and Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (1995) demonstrates how, alternating between a movement of world typical of the time-image, and (...)
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  2.  36
    Pictures, Emotions, Conceptual Change: Anger in Popular Hindi Cinema.Imke Rajamani - 2012 - Contributions to the History of Concepts 7 (2):52-77.
    The article advocates the importance of studying conceptual meaning and change in modern mass media and highlights the significance of conceptual intermediality. The article first analyzes anger in Hindi cinema as an audiovisual key concept within the framework of an Indian national ideology. It explores how anger and the Indian angry young man became popularized, politicized, and stereotyped by popular films and print media in India in the 1970s and 1980s. The article goes on to advocate (...)
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  3. Reflections on the Body Beautiful in Indian Popular Culture.Sumita S. Chakravarty - 2011 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 78 (2):395-416.
    In what ways does a society perceive itself as beautiful? Do images of physical perfection indicate aspirations of the social or national body, the perfect body/face emblematic of the collective self-image? In recent years, under conditions of economic and cultural globalization, practices and discourses to render the body beautiful have come under increasing scrutiny. Concerned with the marketing and commodification of body ideals, these studies trace the deleterious effects of advertising, fashion, and celebrity culture in various national and cross-cultural contexts. (...)
     
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  4.  5
    Visual Anthropology of Indian Films: Religious Communities and Cultural Traditions in Bollywood and Beyond.Pankaj Jain - 2024 - Routledge.
    This book provides a unique insider’s look at the world’s largest film industry, now globally known as ‘Bollywood’ and challenges existing notions about Indian films. -/- Indian films have been a worldwide phenomenon for decades. Chapters in this edited volume take a fresh view of various hidden gems by maestros such as Raj Kapoor, Bimal Roy, V Shantaram, Satyajit Ray, Ritwik Ghatak, Mrinal Sen, Shakti Samant, Rishikesh Mukherjee, and others. Other chapters provide a pioneering review and analysis of (...)
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  5. Dancing with Nine Colours: The Nine Emotional States of Indian Rasa Theory.Dyutiman Mukhopadhyay - manuscript
    This is a brief review of the Rasa theory of Indian aesthetics and the works I have done on the same. A major source of the Indian system of classification of emotional states comes from the ‘Natyasastra’, the ancient Indian treatise on the performing arts, which dates back to the 2nd Century AD (or much earlier, pg. LXXXVI: Natyasastra, Ghosh, 1951). The ‘Natyasastra’ speaks about ‘sentiments’ or ‘Rasas’ (pg.102: Natyasastra, Ghosh, 1951) which are produced when certain ‘dominant (...)
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  6.  32
    Woman in Indian Cinema.Urvashi Butalia - 1984 - Feminist Review 17 (1):108-110.
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  7. Cities, sexualities and modernities: A reading of Indian cinema.Brinda Bose - 2011 - Thesis Eleven 105 (1):44-52.
    I suggest that the representation of cities in Indian cinema — the effects and affects of modernities as well as of ambiguous, multiplicitous sexualities — mark significant change in engagement with modernity ever since independence in 1947. The city in the Indian imaginary has occupied an ambivalent, confrontational as well as contemplative space that signifies ‘modernity’ and its concurrent promise as well as ills. Non-normative sexualities have always occupied a liminal space in socio-political configurations, a site both (...)
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  8. Do Bigha Zamin: A Realistic Wonder of Indian Cinema.Jyoti Tyagi & Pankaj Jain - 2020 - Journal of Visual Anthropology 33 (5).
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  9.  18
    Culture and psyche: selected essays.Sudhir Kakar - 2008 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Culture and Psyche is a collection of Sudhir Kakar's essays on cultural psychology, which analyses various facets of Indian identity and sexuality through sources as diverse as case studies, Indian myths and legends, and popular cinema. The second edition of this classic includes a new introduction and three additional essays which explore issues like riots, the psychology of Islamist terrorism, among others.
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  10.  22
    Indian Philosophy: A Popular Introduction.Dale Riepe - 1966 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 26 (4):611-612.
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  11.  41
    Popular Essays in Indian Philosophy.Mysore Hiriyanna - 1952 - Kavyalaya Publishers.
    Popular Essays in Indian Philosophy, first published in 1952, is an anthology of seventeen philosophical essays by Prof. M. Hiriyanna. These varied essays cover multiple aspects of Indian philosophy-aims, values, ethics, metaphysics, worldview-and gives a panoramic view of the brilliance and sublimity of thought in ancient India as well as the diversity of opinions and the general ecosystem of openness to new ideas. Prof. Hiriyanna shows how the philosophers of India sought constant verification of their theories in (...)
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  12.  16
    Popular Essays in Indian PhilosophyThe Quest after Perfection.T. M. P. Mahadevan & M. Hiriyanna - 1956 - Philosophy East and West 5 (4):357.
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  13.  24
    The Shifting Identities of French Popular Cinema.Martin O'Shaughnessy - 2002 - Film-Philosophy 6 (2).
    _France on Film: Reflections on Popular French Cinema_ Edited by Lucy Mazdon London: Wallflower Press, 2001 ISBN 1 903364-08-6 pbk 180 pp.
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  14.  25
    Art Cinema: The Indian Career of a Global Category.Rochona Majumdar - 2016 - Critical Inquiry 42 (3):580-610.
  15.  44
    The Cinema and Popular Culture.Joffre Dumazedier & Elaine P. Halperin - 1960 - Diogenes 8 (31):103-113.
    Every citizen has an equal right to culture. The development of the means of diffusion and of democratic ideas has unquestionably furthered a trend toward the unification of culture, but this process is often hindered and retarded. Profound disparities separate the cultural ideas and practices of society, the ideal or real cultural models of different social classes and categories, those of different groups, and, finally, those of the leaders and of the public. Imbalances result from this, and it is these (...)
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  16.  77
    Indian philosophy: a popular introduction.Debiprasad Chattopadhyaya - 1964 - [New Delhi]: People's Pub. House.
  17.  41
    Popular pūjas in public places: Lay rituals in south indian temples. [REVIEW]Sita Anantha Raman - 2001 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 5 (2):165-198.
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  18. The Geography of Popular Memory in Post-Colonial South Africa: A Study of Afrikaans Cinema'.Keyan G. Tomaselli - 1988 - In John Eyles & David Marshall Smith, Qualitative methods in human geography. Totowa, N.J.: Barnes & Noble. pp. 136--156.
     
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  19. Time in Indian popular culture.Amrita Basu - 2009 - In Priyadarshi Patnaik, Suhita Chopra & Damodar Suar, Time in Indian cultures: diverse perspectives. New Delhi: D.K. Printworld.
     
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  20.  10
    Cinema Derrida: the law of inspection in the age of global spectral media.Tyson Stewart - 2020 - New York: Peter Lang.
    Cinema Derrida charts Jacques Derrida's collaborations and appearances in film, video, and television beginning with 1983's Ghost Dance (dir. Ken McMullen, West Germany/UK) and ending with 2002's biographical documentary Derrida (dir. Dick and Ziering, USA). In the last half of his working life, Derrida embraced popular art forms and media in more ways than one: not only did he start making more media appearances after years of refusing to have his photo taken in the 1960s and 1970s, but (...)
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  21.  20
    Cinema and the Digital Revolution: The Representations of Digital Culture in Films.Hasan Gürkan & Başak Gezmen - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:1-15.
    This article examines popular cinema’s interactions with digital culture, focusing on cinema and social structure. A product of technological and social developments, digital culture has introduced the creation of cyberspace, the emergence and spread of social media, and the formation of virtual communities. This article focuses on a specific period (1980 – 2010) to examine the evolution in cinema of portrayals of digital culture. The analysis includes four influential films: WarGames (1983, by John Badham), Perfect Blue (...)
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  22. Cinema, philosophy, Bergman: on film as philosophy.Paisley Livingston - 2009 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The increasingly popular idea that cinematic fictions can "do" philosophy raises some difficult questions. Who is actually doing the philosophizing? Is it the philosophical commentator who reads general arguments or theories into the stories conveyed by a film? Could it be the film-maker, or a group of collaborating film-makers, who raise and try to answer philosophical questions with a film? Is there something about the experience of films that is especially suited to the stimulation of worthwhile philosophical reflections? In (...)
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  23. What's so funny about Indian casinos? : comparative notes on gambling, white possession and popular culture in Australia and the USA.Fiona Nicoll - 2008 - In Nicole Anderson & Katrina Schlunke, Cultural Theory in Everyday Practice. Oxford University Press.
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  24.  33
    Oliver Gaycken. Devices of Curiosity: Early Cinema and Popular Science. xii + 254 pp., figs., index. New York: Oxford University Press, 2015. $99. [REVIEW]Jean-Baptiste Gouyon - 2016 - Isis 107 (3):660-661.
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  25.  45
    We are the Dance: Cinema, Death and the Imaginary in the Thought of Edgar Morin.Lorraine Mortimer - 2001 - Thesis Eleven 64 (1):77-95.
    A colleague of Roland Barthes at the CNRS in the 1950s and cowriter and friend of Cornelius Castoriadis until the latter's death, Edgar Morin has until recently been too little known in the English-speaking world. In an oeuvre that spans half a century, attempting to combine in ongoing dialogue the `humanities' and `sciences', Morin has written on scientific method, fundamental anthropology, politics, contemporary life and popular culture. He is an advocate of `complex' thought, thought which does not reduce, rationalize (...)
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  26.  15
    Cinema, Philosophy and Education.Claudia Schumann & Torill Strand - 2021 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 40 (5):453-459.
    This special issue responds to the current discourse on cinema and education from a philosophical point of view. Considering the fact that young people worldwide are watching films and series via their smartphones or personal computers, we here explore the educative aspects of this popular activity. Does this wide-ranging habit mis-educate the next generation? Or does cinema carry a potential for ethical-political education, parallel to the ancient Greek tragedies and the modernist Bildungsroman? The authors of this special (...)
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  27.  41
    Nature in Indian Philosophy and Cultural Traditions.Meera Baindur - 2015 - New Delhi: Springer.
    Working within a framework of environmental philosophy and environmental ethics, this book describes and postulates alternative understandings of nature in Indian traditions of thought, particularly philosophy. The interest in alternative conceptualizations of nature has gained significance after many thinkers pointed out that attitudes to the environment are determined to a large extent by our presuppositions of nature. This book is particularly timely from that perspective. It begins with a brief description of the concept of nature and a history of (...)
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  28.  18
    Imagocracy and Imagomaquia. A Critical Reflection on the Relations Between Audiovisual Communication and Popular Culture in Latin America.Miguel Alfonso Bouhaben & Jorge Polo Blanco - 2020 - Las Torres de Lucca. International Journal of Political Philosophy 9 (17):265-292.
    The purpose of this research is the analysis of a specific cultural and political tension, through two decisive concepts: imagocracy and imagomaquia. Our aim is to define the political battlefield in the arena of audiovisual communication. In the case of Latin America, we have identified two significant moments, in which the popular audiovisual strategies had crucial importance. Our material of research has been both the New Latin American Cinema and the sociology of the decolonial image. We have studied (...)
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  29.  35
    Melodramatic South Asia: In Quest of Local Cinemas in the Region.Dev N. Pathak - 2017 - Journal of Human Values 23 (3):167-177.
    What is remarkably unique of the popular cinema in the region of South Asia? How does it lead beyond the vexed notions of the contemporary milieu, namely, hybrid local? How does it transcend the idea of nationally restricted local too? Looking through eclectic motley of popular cinema in the region, this article seeks to unravel such questions with reflexive propositions. It paves the way to comprehend cinematic identity of the region with the adjective of ‘melodrama’, as (...)
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  30. Torture Porn: Popular Horror after Saw.Steve Jones - 2013 - Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Torture Porn is a term that has generated a great deal of controversy during the last decade, critics utilizing the term to dismiss contemporary popular horror cinema as obscene and morally depraved. Arguing primarily in defense of torture-themed horror films, this book seeks to offer a critical overview and examination of the Torture Porn phenomenon, discussing the generic contexts in which it is situated, scrutinizing press responses to the sub-genre, and offering narrative analyses of the sub-genre’s central films; (...)
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  31. “bad Form”: Contemporary Cinema’s Turn To The Perverse: David Lynch: Lost Highway Lars Von Trier: Breaking The Waves.Hester Joyce & Scott Wilson - 2009 - Colloquy 18:132.
    The form of Western mainstream film is the crux of its ideological efficiency: by using established formal techniques, films ensure audiences un- derstand that aesthetic decisions support and clarify the narrative to ensure maximum spectatorial satisfaction. However, some films exploit their formal aesthetics in order to prevent clarification, thwarting satisfaction in favour of viewing practices that can be considered perverse in that they withhold, suspend or obstruct immediate pleasure. Contemporary Western filmmaking in the mid-1990s witnessed the emergence of a distinct (...)
     
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  32.  76
    Habermas in Pleasantville: Cinema as Political Critique.Robert Porter - 2007 - Contemporary Political Theory 6 (4):405-418.
    Does cinema express or engender political thought? Can we think of cinema, or certain specific cinematic texts, as bodies of political theory? In this paper I provide a positive response to such questions by arguing for a notion of, what I want to call, cinema as political critique. In order to make sense of this idea and render it more concrete, I will draw on fragments of the political theory of Jürgen Habermas and will discuss and give (...)
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  33. Theories of cinema, 1945-1995.Francesco Casetti - 1999 - Austin: University of Texas Press.
    The study of film entered a new era after World War II, as cinema became an acceptable focus for intellectual inquiry. The many ways in which cinema has been imagined, studied, and discussed in the last fifty years are the subject of this comprehensive overview of film theory in the United States and Europe since 1945. Francesco Casetti groups his essays around principal movements in film studies. In the first part of the book, he reviews the attempts at (...)
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  34.  18
    Indianness, Revolutionary Music and National Identity: Songs of a Nation.Tania Sebastian - 2018 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 31 (2):241-259.
    Though Indian courts at present are riddled with issues concerning music on the copyright front, significance of another aspect of music based on its essence is largely lost and unexplored. Though courts refer to popular songs in judgments, they are few and far in between. The understanding is that law today is neither poetic nor musical. Music, however, expresses mankind’s faith, hope and aspiration. The use of popular music by Indian courts to write creatively, though not (...)
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  35.  81
    The Paradox of Film: An Industry of Sex, a Form of Seduction (Notes on Jean Baudrillard's Seduction and the Cinema).Hunter Vaughan - 2010 - Film-Philosophy 14 (2):41-61.
    Jean Baudrillard, the misfit. Jean Baudrillard, who told us that the Gulf Warnever happened, who drew our attention to the perils of a civilization thatchoses to lead a virtual existence in an arena of images and simulacra - this isthe Baudrillard we are mostly familiar with. But Jean Baudrillard, thechampion of appearances? Baudrillard, more-feminist-than-the-feminists?This Baudrillard remains buried in the stacks of a prolific career spanningover forty years and involving some of the most radical systematicdeconstructions of Western culture, society and politics. (...)
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  36.  16
    Novel, leaflet and Indian Novel: XIX century chilean narrative.Eduardo Barraza Jara - 2021 - Alpha (Osorno) 52:43-52.
    Resumen: Entre 1842 y 1870, la narrativa chilena presenta un paulatino proceso de desarrollo que oscila entre la novela -cuando no el cuento- y el folletín. Lastarria califica su cuento “El mendigo” como “novela histórica”. A su vez, Alberto Blest Gana luego de publicar folletines en diversos periódicos de la época toma nítida distancia de ese tipo de “novela popular cuando en 1862 reflexiona acerca de la novela propiamente tal y al declarar -en 1864- que solo pretende ser un (...)
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  37. Para além de Vigiar e Punir: o controle social do corpo e a recodificação da memória popular em filmes de horror.Alex Pereira de Araújo & Nilton Milanez - 2015 - Unidad Sociológica 4 (2):56-64.
    Este estudio se ocupa del control social del cuerpo y de la reconfiguración de la memoria popular en películas de horror a través de la perspectiva genealógica de Foucault, presentada en su libro Vigilar y Castigar, publicado hace 40 años. Por lo tanto, tomaremos, À l’interieur e Frontière (s), dos producciones de horror cinematográfico hechas por directores franceses, ambos publicados en 2007. La hipótesis principal es que las películas de terror se muestran como una nueva forma de vigilancia y (...)
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  38.  25
    Materialism in Indian Philosophy.Smita Talang - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 2:185-189.
    Materialism is the oldest known philosophy. Philosophy was born as materialism and man had been essentially materialistic in character. In general, all our earliest experiences are of the material world. Philosophy means love for knowledge which is the unique characteristic of man. Man is never satisfied with mere food and shelter. Reason impels him towards a quest for knowledge. Philosophy is born at a man's attempt to have rational explanation of the universe around him and of himself as a part (...)
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  39.  96
    "Indians": Textualism, Morality, and the Problem of History.Jane Tompkins - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 13 (1):101-119.
    This essay enacts a particular instance of the challenge post-structuralism poses to the study of history. In simpler, language, it concerns the difference that point of view makes when people are giving account of events, whether at first or second hand. The problem is that if all accounts of events are determined through and through by the observer’s frame of reference, then one will never know, in any given case, what really happened.I encountered this problem in concrete terms while preparing (...)
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  40.  39
    Religious Practices among Indian Hindus: Does that Influence Their Political Choices?Sanjay Kumar - 2009 - Japanese Journal of Political Science 10 (3):313-332.
    The article focuses on the issue of patterns of religious engagement among Indian Hindus during last decade. It tries to look at both the issue of private religion practiced in the form of offering puja at home and public religion seen in terms of participation in Katha, Satsang, Bhajan-Kirtan etc. by Indian Hindus. Sizeable numbers of Indian Hindus offer puja every day; sizeable numbers of them are also engaged in public religious activities. This is more prevalent among (...)
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  41.  29
    Deleuze, Japanese Cinema, and the Atom Bomb: The Spectre of Impossibility.David Deamer - 2014 - New York, NY, USA: Bloomsbury.
    Deleuze, Japanese Cinema, and the Atom Bomb establishes the first ever sustained encounter between Gilles Deleuze’s Cinema books and post-war Japanese cinema, exploring how Japanese films responded to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. From the early days of occupation and political censorship to the social and cultural freedoms of the 1960s and beyond, the book examines how images of the nuclear event appear in post-war Japanese cinema. -/- Using Deleuze’s taxonony of cinema, each (...)
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  42. Teaching & learning guide for: Cinema as philosophy.Paisley Livingston - 2010 - Philosophy Compass 5 (4):359-362.
    The idea that films can be philosophical, or in some sense ‘do’ philosophy, has recently found a number of prominent proponents. What is at stake here is generally more than the tepid claim that some documentaries about philosophy and related topics convey philosophically relevant content. Instead, the contention is that cinematic fictions, including popular movies such as The Matrix, make significant contributions to philosophy. Various more specific claims are linked to this basic idea. One, relatively weak, but pedagogically important (...)
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  43.  55
    Indian Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction (review). [REVIEW]Heeraman Tiwari - 2005 - Philosophy East and West 55 (3):482-484.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Indian Philosophy: A Very Short IntroductionHeeraman TiwariIndian Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction. By Sue Hamilton. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. Pp. 168.In recent years there has been a renewed interest in classical Indian philosophy; it cannot be a coincidence that at least three short books on the subject were written for the lay reader between the year 2000 and 2002, and all published by Oxford University (...)
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  44.  18
    Indigenous and Popular Thinking in América.Rodolfo Kusch - 2010 - Duke University Press.
    Originally published in Mexico in 1970, _Indigenous and Popular Thinking in América _is the first book by the Argentine philosopher Rodolfo Kusch to be translated into English. At its core is a binary created by colonization and the devaluation of indigenous practices and cosmologies: an opposition between the technologies and rationalities of European modernity and the popular mode of thinking, which is deeply tied to Indian ways of knowing and being. Arguing that this binary cuts through América, (...)
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  45.  16
    Resistance to Western Popular and Pop-Culture in India.Algis Mickūnas - 2017 - Santalka: Filosofija, Komunikacija 25 (1):48-62.
    The essay is designed to present the phenomena of popular culture, its difference from pop culture, both products of modern West, and their impact on film and advertisement media in India. First, the discussion focuses on the Critical School which proposed the initial thesis of commodification of culture with a resultant “lowering” of standards to appeal to “the masses”, and an appeal to the “average” tastes. In the essay an argument is presented that pop culture is a “critique” of (...)
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  46.  13
    Indigenous and Popular Thinking in América.Joshua M. Price & María Lugones (eds.) - 2010 - Duke University Press.
    Originally published in Mexico in 1970, _Indigenous and Popular Thinking in América _is the first book by the Argentine philosopher Rodolfo Kusch to be translated into English. At its core is a binary created by colonization and the devaluation of indigenous practices and cosmologies: an opposition between the technologies and rationalities of European modernity and the popular mode of thinking, which is deeply tied to Indian ways of knowing and being. Arguing that this binary cuts through América, (...)
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  47.  21
    Deleuze and World Cinemas by David Martin-Jones.Gerald Sim - 2019 - Substance 48 (1):102-106.
    One has the distinct feeling that Deleuze and World Cinemas was already in the works when David Martin-Jones published Deleuze: Cinema and National Identity in 2006. In that earlier study, he married Deleuze with Homi K. Bhabha to produce constructive readings of both canonical and popular films. He considers these texts to be hybrid films that display qualities of both the movement-image and time-image, two Deleuzian concepts he deploys in showing how narrative time fashions national identity in distinctive (...)
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  48.  19
    Representações sem'nticas de raça e classe da cultura popular para literatura e para televisão.Viviane Lucy Vilar de Andrade - 2013 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 2 (2).
    Há um diálogo entre os estudos antropológicos e literários não só porque a literatura está dentro do âmbito da antropologia cultural, mas também porque a literatura de um povo reflete substancialmente os aspectos da sua cultura e sua visão de mundo. Este trabalho investiga as representações de classe, raça e relações raciais em “O Romance d'A Pedra e o Príncipe do Sangue do Vai-e-Volta”, um romance do autor brasileiro contemporâneo, Ariano Suassuna (1927). Em primeiro lugar, pretende-se demonstrar como a representação (...)
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  49.  90
    The Bloomsbury Research Handbook of Indian Ethics.Shyam Ranganathan (ed.) - 2017 - London: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Featuring leading scholars from philosophy and religious studies, The Bloomsbury Research Handbook of Indian Ethics dispels the myth that Indian thinkers and philosophers were uninterested in ethics. -/- This comprehensive research handbook traces Indian moral philosophy through classical, scholastic Indian philosophy, pan-Indian literature including the Epics, Ayurvedic medical ethics, as well as recent, traditionalist and Neo-Hindu contributions. Contrary to the usual myths about India (that Indians were too busy being religious to care about ethics), moral (...)
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  50.  22
    The Monstrous Mark of Cinema: Mulholland Drive, Spherology, and the “Virtual Space” of Filmic Fiction.James Dutton - 2023 - Film-Philosophy 27 (3):553-578.
    This article interprets David Lynch's Mulholland Drive (2001) to argue for the morphological influence cinematic images have on modernity's monstrous identity. It shows how Lynch's tactic of interweaving apparently discrete spaces of dream and reality – one often inverting or uncannily ironising the other – relies on the virtual space of cinema, which leaves a mark on understanding, irrespective of its apparent truth. To do so, I employ Peter Sloterdijk's philosophy of space – especially the spherology developed in his (...)
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