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Exploitation, victimhood and gendered performance in Rituparno Ghosh’s Bariwali

Exploitation, victimhood and gendered performance in Rituparno Ghosh’s Bariwali
Exploitation, victimhood and gendered performance in Rituparno Ghosh’s Bariwali
This article analyzes Rituparno Ghosh's celebrated film Bariwali (The Lady of the House, 2000). The film marks the beginnings of Ghosh's treatment of gender and sexual politics. Ghosh's earlier films Unishe April (1994) and Dahan (1997) engaged with strong female characters, but Bariwali is the first of his films to narrate the various ways in which female agency is routed through male exploitation and patriarchy. Through close readings of the characters and the visual tropes perspicaciously crafted by Ghosh, this article positions hegemonic masculinity and heteropatriarchal privilege as the exploiter within India's gendered politics. By placing the protagonist Banalata both within the feudal space as well as within the bhadralok discourse, one can trace the transition from tradition to modernity that the story represents, and in turn trace Ghosh's unique understanding of and reaction against India's prevailing social and cultural norms.
0015-1386
35-46
Dasgupta, Rohit
d5f440d7-8d71-4292-9b2e-a2296a654a40
Banerjee, Tanmayee
3fb120aa-b71f-424a-9384-21afc6ad0371
Dasgupta, Rohit
d5f440d7-8d71-4292-9b2e-a2296a654a40
Banerjee, Tanmayee
3fb120aa-b71f-424a-9384-21afc6ad0371

Dasgupta, Rohit and Banerjee, Tanmayee (2016) Exploitation, victimhood and gendered performance in Rituparno Ghosh’s Bariwali. Film Quarterly, 69 (4), Summer Issue, 35-46. (doi:10.1525/fq.2016.69.4.35).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article analyzes Rituparno Ghosh's celebrated film Bariwali (The Lady of the House, 2000). The film marks the beginnings of Ghosh's treatment of gender and sexual politics. Ghosh's earlier films Unishe April (1994) and Dahan (1997) engaged with strong female characters, but Bariwali is the first of his films to narrate the various ways in which female agency is routed through male exploitation and patriarchy. Through close readings of the characters and the visual tropes perspicaciously crafted by Ghosh, this article positions hegemonic masculinity and heteropatriarchal privilege as the exploiter within India's gendered politics. By placing the protagonist Banalata both within the feudal space as well as within the bhadralok discourse, one can trace the transition from tradition to modernity that the story represents, and in turn trace Ghosh's unique understanding of and reaction against India's prevailing social and cultural norms.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 15 August 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 June 2016
Published date: 2016
Organisations: Winchester School of Art

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 391555
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/391555
ISSN: 0015-1386
PURE UUID: 60e96e70-15e0-4e37-9517-96aa34227332

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Date deposited: 20 Apr 2016 08:39
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 23:31

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Contributors

Author: Rohit Dasgupta
Author: Tanmayee Banerjee

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