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Widowhood and Motherhood in Cinematic Imagination in the Historical Context

Jyoti Atwal

1Centre for Historical Studies, School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India .

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.12944/CRJSSH.4.Special-Issue.01

This article engages with the question of how Hindi cinema sought to synergize and imagine the nation, community and land in independent India as the embodiment of widowhood. I suggest that this process of embodiment was the culmination of a long historical-political process. The focus of this chapter is a 1957 Hindi film by Mehboob Khan named Mother India. The film stands out as a powerful emotional drama. On the one hand, this film marked continuity with the Indian literature, painting, theatre and cinema of the colonial period,1 on the other, Mother India influenced the culture of a new Indian nation after 1947. Within a decade after India attained independence from Britain, the Indian cinema became an undisputed site where the cultural engineering of a new nation could be enacted.2

Gandhi; Hindi Cinema; Independence; Mother India; Nation; Nehru; Peasant; Widowhood

Copy the following to cite this article:

Atwal J. Widowhood and Motherhood in Cinematic Imagination in the Historical Context. Current Research Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities. 2021 SI(1). DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.12944/CRJSSH.4.Special-Issue.01

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Atwal J. Widowhood and Motherhood in Cinematic Imagination in the Historical Context. Current Research Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities. 2021 SI(1). Available From: https://bit.ly/3qgzUeo


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