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HAAVC-2000-3: Popular Indian Cinema

Fall 2024

Subject: History of Art and Visual Culture
Type: Lecture
Delivery Mode: In-Person
Level: Undergraduate

Campus: San Francisco
Course Dates: August 28, 2024 — December 10, 2024
Meetings: Mon 12:00-03:00PM, Main Bldg - E1
Instructor: Lucia Fagen-DeLuca

Units: 3.0
Enrolled: 16/18

Description:

Popular Indian cinema reveals the desires and hardship of the masses and the utopian ideals of directors and actors.  From the Marxist black and white films of the 1950s to the hopeful nationalisms of the 1970s, these films offer insight about the transformation of a post-independence socialist nation-state into a global economic power in a free-market economy. Bollywood then and now will trace the ideals of past and present popular Hindi-language films and their intersection with the harsh realities of communalism, economic disparity, gender inequities, and disability rights.  Themes such as gender, violence, friendship, love, and inner experience will focus our discussion of films as we explore methodologies including formalism, auteurship, stardom, social history, textual analysis, and performance theory in relation to dance and music.   We will conclude with an examination of new cinema in and out of India to pose the Gramscian question of whether cinema is simply a pleasant distraction, or an opiate for the masses, or even a liberating medium of change.HAAVC 2000 courses develop students' visual analysis skills while providing the opportunity for in-depth study of the visual/structural artifacts associated with a particular topic, region, or movement. Students will also engage with the relevant primary/secondary literature for the topic at hand. Courses will pay particular attention to the larger cultural, historical, and theoretical/ideological contexts in which the visual artifacts and structures under consideration were created.

Pre-Requisites and Co-Requisites:

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