Shooting Terror

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1990s Kashmiri insurgency
A01=Meenakshi Bharat
Author_Meenakshi Bharat
Basharat Peer
Bharat Mata Ki Jai
Bin Laden
Bollywood
Category=ATF
Category=JPWL
Chandni Chowk
cinematic depictions of terrorism in India
comic
CRPF Personnel
cultural trauma analysis
Dhobi Ghat
Dil Se
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Grand Bazaar
heritage
Hindi Cinema
Hindi cinema studies
Hrithik Roshan
IAS Officer
Indian cultural space
interdisciplinary cultural studies
Islamophobia
Kargil war
Kashmir conflict narratives
Kashmiri Identity
Kashmiri Terrorism
Khalistan
Long Shots
Mainstream Hindi Cinema
Maoist insurgency
Mission Kashmir
Mumbai
national narrative
Osama Bin Laden
satire
satire in film studies
self-reflexive
sociopolitical violence
Tamil Nadu
Tere Bin Laden
Terror Act
terrorism
Tiger Memon
trauma
Tv Coverage
urban conflict representation
Wood Bridges
WTC Tower
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138351172
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Feb 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Shooting Terror highlights the disturbing immediacy of acts of terror and how cinema responds to them. It follows the changing representations of terrorism in Hindi cinema by fielding in-depth textual analyses of films such as Roja, Maachis, Black Friday, Tere Bin Laden, Uri: The Surgical Strike, among others.

It traces how terror and the terrorist have come to be viewed in the Indian cultural space and lays the grounds for a multivalent, perspectival reading of cinema and terrorism. Moving from the threat of terror condensed in the Mogambo-esque villain in Mr. India, to the showcasing of terror and the terrorist in their lived-in realities in Haider and Shahid, the book explores the fraught connections between terror and the themes of devastation and trauma; between terror and the urban cityscape. It also seeks to highlight the place of humour and satire in films on terrorism and the presence of the reactionary far right in these films.

One of the first books to present a composite picture of terrorism in contemporary Hindi cinema, this volume will be of interest to researchers and academics of cultural studies, media and film studies, and the study of sociopsychological violence in media and culture.

Meenakshi Bharat teaches in the University of Delhi and is a writer, translator, reviewer, and critic. Her special interests include children’s literature, women’s fiction, film studies, postcolonial, English, and cultural studies. Her most recent publications are Troubled Testimonies: Terrorism and the Indian Novel in English (2015) and an anthology of Indo-Australian short fiction, Glass Walls: Stories on Tolerance and Intolerance (2019).

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