BOOKS - Bombay Hustle: Making Movies in a Colonial City (Film and Culture Series)
Bombay Hustle: Making Movies in a Colonial City (Film and Culture Series) - Debashree Mukherjee September 22, 2020 PDF  BOOKS
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Bombay Hustle: Making Movies in a Colonial City (Film and Culture Series)
Author: Debashree Mukherjee
Year: September 22, 2020
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 27 MB
Language: English

From starry-eyed fans with dreams of fame to cotton entrepreneurs turned movie moguls, the Bombay film industry has historically energized a range of practices and practitioners, playing a crucial and compelling role in the life of modern India. Bombay Hustle presents an ambitious history of Indian cinema as a history of material practice, bringing new insights to studies of media, modernity, and the late colonial city.Drawing on original archival research and an innovative transdisciplinary approach, Debashree Mukherjee offers a panoramic portrait of the consolidation of the Bombay film industry during the talkie transition of the 1920s-1940s. In the decades leading up to independence in 1947, Bombay became synonymous with marketplace thrills, industrial strikes, and modernist experimentation. Its burgeoning film industry embodied Bombay's spirit of and "hustle, and " gathering together and spewing out the many different energies and emotions that characterized the city. Bombay Hustle examines diverse sites of film production - finance, pre-production paperwork, casting, screenwriting, acting, stunts - to show how speculative excitement jostled against desires for scientific management in an industry premised on the struggle between contingency and control. Mukherjee develops the concept of a and "cine-ecology and " in order to examine the bodies, technologies, and environments that collectively shaped the production and circulation of cinematic meaning in this time. The book thus brings into view a range of marginalized film workers, their labor and experiences; forgotten film studios, their technical practices and aesthetic visions; and overlooked connections among media practices, geographical particularities, and historical exigencies.

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