Jasbir Jain (Ed.)

Muslim Culture in Indian Cinema brings together in-depth explorations of the various facets of Muslim life and culture as they are woven into collective histories. The volume takes into its range more than sixty years of cinematic presentation, moves into past histories through films like Mughal-e-Azam and Shatranj ke Khiladi, analyses personal relationships and seeks to deconstruct and consider larger issues such as language, music and poetry.
The excerpts from Saeed Mirza’s Ammi touch upon several sensitive and significant issues while Anisur Rahman presents a perceptive overview of the intricacies of cultural representation. Qawallis, Sufi philosophy, language, partition, divided families, courtesans, and Muslim personal law are some of the issues that are explored through cinematic representations nudging our memories as a reminder of our collective heritage. Together the essays open out multifarious dimensions for further exploration both for the expert and the novice.
Jasbir Jain is an independent scholar, formerly of the University of Rajasthan, Jaipur. She has wide-ranging interconnected interests. Theoretical approaches, feminist positions, forms of representation and ways of narrating all fascinate her. Cinematic studies happens to combine many of these interests. Muslim Culture in Indian Cinema follows two other collections: Films and Feminism (co-edited) and an edited volume Films, Literature and Culture: Deepa Mehta’s Elements Trilogy.
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