TY - JOUR PY - 2013// TI - Terror as cinematic desire: Discourses of citizenry and the challenge of the 'Non-Statist' JO - South Asian popular culture A1 - Parciack, R. SP - 145 EP - 155 VL - 11 IS - 2 N2 - This essay addresses a radical trope formulated in films produced as of the mid-1990s by the dominant Hindi film industry of Mumbai, India. In these films terrorists or suicide bombers who aim to harm the Indian population and national symbols are constituted as objects of desire. Given the assumption according to which mainstream media works to preserve social frameworks, what is the significance of such a trope? What is signified by a desire for an agent who calls for the dissolution of the national subject, and aims to destroy the nation from within? The reading I suggest focuses on the civil significance of this trope, the way it reverses dominant readings of the Hindu-Muslim balance of power in Hindi cinema, and the challenge it poses for the premises of contemporary cultural studies advancing the understanding of mainstream media as an agent promoting stabilizing ideologies within the social and national space. © 2013 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1474-6689 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14746689.2013.784056 ID - ref1 ER -