Non-resident cinema: transnational audiences for Indian films

Similar documents
Almaviva: a contemporary adaptation of Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro

Creating unity within an album for compositions defined as "jazz style"

Towards a poetics of hope: Simone Weil, Fanny Howe and Alice Walker

University of Wollongong. Research Online

Theatre internationalisation: a Vietnamese perspective

Writing counter-histories of the Americas: Leslie Marmon Silko's Almanac Of The Dead

NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY CALICUT ACADEMIC SECTION. GUIDELINES FOR PREPARATION AND SUBMISSION OF PhD THESIS

UFS QWAQWA ENGLISH HONOURS COURSES: 2017

Printing may distort margins: Check for accuracy!

Documentary Transforms into Video Installation via the Processes of Intertextuality and Détournement

The therapeutic potential of using film as an intervention in counselling and psychotherapy

On the design of turbo codes with convolutional interleavers

A Comparative Study of Contemporary East and West African Poetry in English

Orchestral Education Programmes:

Top and Bottom Margins are 1 inch. Dissertation Title in Initial Capitals and Small Letters (Single-space the title if more than one line)

Community Choirs in Australia

Gujarat Technological University. Guidelines. For The Preparation of M.E./M.Pharm. Thesis

Information for organisations seeking to be prescribed as a 'key cultural institution'

Reappraising the Renaissance

Ethnomusicology at the University of Manchester

MA Project Guide. Penn State Harrisburg American Studies MA Project Guide

Welcome to the UBC Research Commons Thesis Template User s Guide for Word 2011 (Mac)

Kunapipi 11 (1) 1989, Contents, Editorial

GENERAL WRITING FORMAT

THESIS STANDARD. Research & Development Department

SOCIAL AND CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY

Formats for Theses and Dissertations

Odysseus unbound and Penelope unstable: contemporary Australian expatriate women writers

Screening Loans Registration Form

The importance of social and political literacies: In defence of cultural and media studies

Copyright is owned by the Author of the thesis. Permission is given for a copy to be downloaded by an individual for the purpose of research and

Authenticity and Tourism in Kazakhstan: Neo-nomadic Culture in the Post-Soviet Era

Draft Guidelines on the Preparation of B.Tech. Project Report

Common Guidelines for Format of PhD Thesis CENTRE FOR RESEARCH

specialty cinema... the exhibitor s choice

Review Your Thesis or Dissertation

Review Your Thesis or Dissertation

Left Margin 1.25 inches Right Margin 1.25 inches Top and Bottom Margins are 1 inch

Film and Media Studies (FLM&MDA)

SEMINAR TITLE SEMINAR REPORT ON. Name of the student. Guided by Mr. Name of guide Designation

Prentice Hall World History Ellis Esler

The Working-Class Experience in Contemporary Australian Poetry

Students who wish to read English Literature should have obtained at least one of the following:

Global Korean Popular Culture Kyung Hee University GAFC, July 2 20, 2018

This is the right to REPRODUCE (make copies of) a musical work, for sale or use by the public.

Pragmatism and In-betweenery: Light music in the practice of Australian composers in the postwar period, c James Philip Koehne

The Pathology of Historical Texts' translation: A Study of Persian Translations of 7 th volume of Cambridge History of Iran

TITLE OF THE THESIS, FONT: CALIBRI, FONT SIZE: 22,

The University of the West Indies. IGDS MSc Research Project Preparation Guide and Template

Draft Guidelines on the Preparation of B.Tech. Project Report

Program General Structure

AACTA AWARD FOR BEST ASIAN FILM Process and Eligibility Criteria

THESIS AND DISSERTATION FORMATTING GUIDE GRADUATE SCHOOL

SAINT MARY S UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES

Beyond the Bezel: Utilizing Multiple Monitor High-Resolution Displays for Viewing Geospatial Data CANDICE RAE LUEBBERING

GUIDELINES FOR PREPARATION OF ARTICLE STYLE THESIS AND DISSERTATION

INTRODUCING LITERATURE

FORMAT OF Minor PROJECT REPORT

Effective from the Session Department of English University of Kalyani

Prefatory Page (no page #) Committee Member Page (for Project or Thesis)

EXPRESSIVE CULTURE: FILM MULTICULTURALISM, RACE, AND THE MEDIA

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, DOMINGUEZ HILLS OFFICE OF GRADUATE STUDIES AND RESEARCH

The K-pop Factory Phenomenon

F.O.O.D. (Fighting Order Over Disorder): An Analysis of Food and Its Significance in the Australian Novels of

Off the Mark : Marginality, Narratives, and Reclaiming History. organized by. Dep t of English Sidho-Kanho-Birsha University, Purulia

Preparing Your CGU Dissertation/Thesis for Electronic Submission

The University of Sheffield. School of Architecture. ARC6853 Theory and Research in Design. January Submitted by. Name: Reza Fallahtafti

Programme Specification

Sarasota County Public Library System. Collection Development Policy April 2011

Call for Embedded Opportunity: The British Library Sound Archive

UNISA S CENTRE FOR APPLIED INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION

SYLLABUSES FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS

PRS At a Glance. Sound Advice

GUIDELINES FOR BACHELOR PROJECT

The use of humour in EFL teaching: A case study of Vietnamese university teachers and students perceptions and practices

ENGLISH (ENG) Vous consultez la version du catalogue.

Top and Bottom Margins are 1 inch. Thesis Title in Initial Capitals and Small Letters (Single-space the title if more than one line) by Your Name

CITATION ANALYSES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATION OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: A STUDY OF PANJAB UNIVERSITY, CHANDIGARH

GUIDELINES FOR THE PREPARATION OF A GRADUATE THESIS. Master of Science Program. (Updated March 2018)

Guideline for M.A. Thesis Writing Department of Linguistics University of Kelaniya

Style Guide. 2. Genovese, Roll, Jordan Roll, 7.

MFA in Visual Studies Thesis Guidelines INTRODUCTION FORMAT. THESIS REVIEW and SUBMISSION

SAARC CULTURAL CENTRE COLOMBO, SRI LANKA SAARC FILM FESTIVAL 2017 INDIA A Powerful and Unique Experience in Cultural Diversity

TAYLOR SWIFT S UNCONVENTIONAL COUNTRY MUSIC THEME IN HER MUSIC VIDEOS YOU BELONG WITH ME AND MEAN

Also by Erica Fudge and from the same publishers AT THE BORDERS OF THE HUMAN: Beasts, Bodies and Natural Philosophy in the Early Modern Period

Collection Development Policy. Giovanni Mejia San Jose State University

Thesis Guidelines Graduate School of Archaeology

DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY GEOG3811 POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY FALL 2016

Avoiding plagiarism - information, communication and referencing

AN ANALYSIS OF INTRINSIC ELEMENTS IN CHARLES DICKENS

Performing and contextualising the late piano works of Akira Miyoshi: a portfolio of recorded performances and exegesis

Doctor of Philosophy

GUIDELINES FOR FORMATING OF MASTER AND PHD THESES. Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro

MODULE TITLE : PROGRAMMABLE LOGIC CONTROLLERS TOPIC TITLES : PROGRAMMABLE FACILITIES AND ADDITIONAL FACILITIES TUTOR MARKED ASSIGNMENT 3

THESIS/DISSERTATION FORMAT AND LAYOUT

Higher Education Research Data Collection (HERDC): Publications issues paper

SAINT MARY S UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES

INSTRUCTIONS FOR COMPILATION OF THESIS/RESEARCH DISSERTATION

RESTRUCTURING SOUTH AFRICAN MUSIC EDUCATION CURRICULUM TO MEET THE POST-APARTHEID PARADIGM SHIFT IN EDUCATION. Doctor Musicae

The Eastern Shore Room Eastern Shore Public Library LOCAL HISTORY COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT POLICY

Transcription:

University of Wollongong Research Online University of Wollongong Thesis Collection 1954-2016 University of Wollongong Thesis Collections 2005 Non-resident cinema: transnational audiences for Indian films Adrian Mabbott Athique University of Wollongong Recommended Citation Athique, Adrian Mabbott, Non-resident cinema: transnational audiences for Indian films, PhD thesis, Faculty of Arts, University of Wollongong, 2005. http://ro.uow.edu.au/theses/473 Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: research-pubs@uow.edu.au

NOTE This online version of the thesis may have different page formatting and pagination from the paper copy held in the University of Wollongong Library. UNIVERSITY OF WOLLONGONG COPYRIGHT WARNING You may print or download ONE copy of this document for the purpose of your own research or study. The University does not authorise you to copy, communicate or otherwise make available electronically to any other person any copyright material contained on this site. You are reminded of the following: Copyright owners are entitled to take legal action against persons who infringe their copyright. A reproduction of material that is protected by copyright may be a copyright infringement. A court may impose penalties and award damages in relation to offences and infringements relating to copyright material. Higher penalties may apply, and higher damages may be awarded, for offences and infringements involving the conversion of material into digital or electronic form.

Non-Resident Cinema: Transnational Audiences for Indian Films A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the award of the degree Doctor of Philosophy from UNIVERSITY OF WOLLONGONG by Adrian Mabbott Athique, BA (Hons) Communications and Cultural Studies Faculty of Arts 2005

CERTIFICATION I, Adrian Mabbott Athique, declare that this thesis, submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the award of Doctor of Philosophy, in the Faculty of Arts, University of Wollongong, is wholly my own work unless otherwise referenced or acknowledged. The document has not been submitted for qualifications at any other academic institution. Adrian Mabbott Athique 29th August 2005 ii

Contents List of Illustrations Thesis Abstract Acknowledgements vii viii ix Introduction to the Study 1 The Research Standpoint 3 Structure of the Thesis 6 Part One: Indian Cinema as a Global Cinema 11 Chapter One : Flags of Convenience: The Logic of National Cinema 13 Arguments for National Cinema 14 The Protectionist Argument 15 The Cultural Defence Argument 18 The Nation-Building Argument 21 Studies in National Cinema 24 Historical Understandings of National Cinema and National Cultures 33 Cinema as Nation: Theoretical Implications 50 Chapter Two: How National is Indian Cinema?: Histories and Theories 55 Colonialism, Nationalism and Culture 55 The Media in Postcolonial India 69 A Suitable Cinema 70 The New World Order 79 The Literature on Indian Cinema 84 The Search For Explanation in Indian Film Studies 85 Modernist Approaches 87 iii

Traditionalist Approaches 90 Balancing Modernist and Traditionalist Approaches 93 Indian Cinema as a National Cinema 98 Chapter Three: The Global Dispersal of Indian Films 101 Global Markets for Indian Cinema 101 Identifying Transnational Audiences for Indian Films 109 The Diasporic Audience 111 Constructing the India Diaspora 114 Bollywood and Cultural Affirmation 121 Imagining a Western Audience 127 Beyond the East/West Binary: Parallel Audiences for Indian Films 133 Situating Transnational Audiences 141 Chapter Four: Global Audiences, Media Ethnography and the Notion of Cultural Field 143 The Cultural Production of Globalisation 143 The Geopolitics of Cinema 145 Media and Modernity at Large 148 Resident and Non-Resident Modes of Cinema 156 Media Studies, Ethnographic Practice and the Situated Imagination 159 The Cultural Field as a Site of Relational Imagining 167 Theorising the Cultural Field 168 Inhabiting the Cultural Field 172 Part Two: Indian Films in an Australian Social Context 179 Chapter Five: Introduction to the Case Study 181 The Conduct and Structure of the Case Study 184 iv

Online Survey 184 Professional Interviews 185 Audience Interviews 186 Screening Survey 187 The Field of Analysis 188 An Australian Social Context 189 The Mainstream Media in Australia 190 Accounting for Tastes 198 Migration and Multiculturalism in Australia 203 Bollywood Down Under 212 Presentation of the Case Study 223 Chapter Six: Locating A Field of Practices 225 A Migrant Cinema in Greater Western Sydney 226 A Grocery Store in the Illawarra 233 Fox Studios Australia, Moore Park, Sydney 243 Hoyts Cinema Paris 245 Films and Casting Temple Pty 255 Hot Ashes Representin Australian Indian Youth 260 Local Geographies and Global Practice 265 Chapter Seven: Talking About Films 267 First Encounters 268 The Distinctiveness of Indian Cinema 272 The Reflective Nature of Indian Cinema 275 Bollywood as a Multi-Media Industry 280 Indians Films as a Non-Resident Artefact 288 A Strategic Media Community 291 v

Chapter Eight: Imagining Audiences 293 The Diasporic Audience 295 The Australian Mainstream Audience 311 A Tale of Two Audiences 327 Chapter Nine: The Social Imagination of Media Audiences 331 The Transnational as a Relational Spectrum 332 A Community of Differences 338 A Field of Cultural Practices 346 References 351 Filmography 374 Appendix 381 vi

List of Illustrations: Fig. 1 Mural, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia 11 Fig. 2 Linguistic Map of Colonial India, Burma and Ceylon showing main centres of film production 65 Fig. 3 Administrative map of India 2003 showing main centres of film production 84 Fig. 4 Conurbation of Wollongong, Illawarra region, New South Wales, Australia 179 Fig. 5 Case Study Research Area 181 Fig. 6 A Grocery store-cum-playback outlet in metropolitan Sydney, New South Wales, 2003 239 Fig. 7 Electronic flyers circulated to promote Indian-themed club events in Australia. 263 vii

Thesis Abstract: In this thesis the popular Indian film is described as an object of global significance. It is argued that understanding Indian films on a global scale requires different governing structures to existing paradigms of national media research and that, in particular, this requires a focus upon the consumption, rather than the production, of cinema. This thesis will also argue that the Australian media environment is constituted by a complex matrix of transnational cultural flows that spread beyond the boundaries of nationalist discourse, and that understanding the social dynamics of cinema in Australia requires an intellectual engagement with the phenomenon of globalisation. This thesis seeks to locate the cultural geography of Indian films in a global context before presenting a local case study that draws on a body of interviews and survey exercises conducted during 2003-04 with film-viewers and media professionals in the Greater Sydney and Illawarra regions of New South Wales, Australia. My immediate concern is with the manner in which Indian movies reach an audience within this social environment and how that audience is described, both by themselves and by those who seek to cater to them. Thus, a further intention of this study overall is to conduct a reevaluation of the nature of the social imagination which has been assumed to operate around participation in communities defined by media use. This study therefore combines three major points of enquiry: Indian films as globally dispersed media artefacts, Australia as a site of complex transnational cultural practices, and media audiences as sites of relational social imagination. The theoretical framework that I advance here reformulates the conception of media audiences as imagined communities by replacing a demographically constituted ethnographic model with an emphasis on surveying the diverse inhabitants of a cultural field constructed around the Indian movie in a specific Australian social context. viii

Acknowledgements: I would like to offer my sincere thanks to all the study participants who helped to make this a work founded on collaboration, and were willing to do so without recompense. I would also like to thank my supervisors, Dr. Kate Bowles and Dr. Brian Yecies, who gave me the benefit of their immense experience as well as healthy doses of enthusiasm and scepticism where and when each was required. Many thanks also to Tim McDonald who responded to my many administrative queries with enormous goodwill. I would like to acknowledge the generous support of my colleagues in the School of Social Sciences, Media and Communication at the University of Wollongong, and in the Centre for Asia Pacific Transformation Studies (CAPSTRANS). I would also like to thank the Communications and Cultural Transformations Group at the University of Wollongong for giving me a forum to share some of these ideas. For the same reason, I am indebted to the Indian Association for the Study of Australia (IASA), the Film and History Association of Australia and New Zealand (FHANZ) and the National Centre for South Asian Studies (NCSAS) who all provided me with a platform for my research. I would also like to thank Graeme Turner and the Australian Cultural Research Network for taking an interest in my work. Sincere thanks are also due to Chris Rodrigues and Phil Ellis at the University of Plymouth who encouraged me to get the ball rolling in the first place. Even with all of this help, this study would not have been possible without the financial support of the Commonwealth of Australia. Finally, I would like to recognise the important contribution made by my friends in Wollongong who listened with patience, found time to share their own ideas with me and were too generous to remark on my atrocious bowling action. ix