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Ritwik Ghatak: Occasional Essays for a 100th Birthday [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 200 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 454 g, 2 color plates, 40 halftones
  • Sari: The India List
  • Ilmumisaeg: 06-Jul-2026
  • Kirjastus: Seagull Books London Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1803096578
  • ISBN-13: 9781803096575
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Ritwik Ghatak: Occasional Essays for a 100th Birthday
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 200 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 454 g, 2 color plates, 40 halftones
  • Sari: The India List
  • Ilmumisaeg: 06-Jul-2026
  • Kirjastus: Seagull Books London Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1803096578
  • ISBN-13: 9781803096575
Teised raamatud teemal:
A bold, transnational interpretation of Ritwik Ghataks cinema that invites readers to encounter his films as meditations on history, migration, and collective survival.

The cinema of Ritwik Ghatak (192576) continues to resonate across borders and generations. His filmslargely shaped by the 1947 Partition of Bengal and the experience of displacementprobe the fractured human condition through bold formal experimentation, unforgettable soundscapes, and a profound sense of myth and memory. Though his body of work was modest in size, Ghataks influence has steadily expanded, securing his place as a major figure in world cinema. This distinctive volume, which marks the centenary of this visionary filmmaker, gathers essays by important scholars and thinkers from around the world.

Moving beyond conventional film criticism and area studies, the collection stages new, transnational encounters with Ghataks filmsapproaching them as world texts, as sonic and visual experiments, and as meditations on migration, collectivity, and social existence.

Arvustused

Of all Indias many comparatively unsung directors, Ritwik Ghatak (192676) was possibly the most obviously talented. . . . Here was a passionate and intensely national filmmaker who seemed to have found his way without much access to the work of others but who was most certainly of international calibre. Arrogant, overbearing and hopelessly unreliable, he was also much loved and admired as a restless iconoclast whose dreams were never likely to be wholly fulfilled but still worth dreaming in the fractured society which he seemed to epitomise. -- Derek Malcolm, BFI * Praise for Ritwik Ghatak * [ Ritwik Ghataks] films are not cathartic. They speak to the enduring violence thats caused by forced exile and to the global crises and conflictsneoliberal economic reform, armed insurgency, civil war, an ongoing refugee crisis, the global war on terror, the global water crisis, authoritarian challenges to democracythat extend well beyond the subcontinent. These films rattle with and against their subjects, pulping atrocity to find the agonized pith within. Ghataks singular filmic vision depicts the implacable, everyday groping toward hope, if not a home, that can and will encumber a life lived in exile. -- Shiv Kotecha, Frieze * Praise for Ritwik Ghatak * In portraying the trauma of the loss of homes among refugees from East Pakistan, which recurs in most of his films for instance, he tried to turn it into a metaphor for the universal sense of rootlessness and alienation suffered by individuals and communities. -- Sumanta Banerjee, Countercurrents * Praise for Ritwik Ghatak * For Ghatak, it was the loss of subjecthood experienced by a nations people, newly divided along arbitrary linesa condition imposed as the very criterion of claiming a newly conceived citizenshipthat became a recurring obsession. Rather than try to dramatize all the physical brutality of Partition, Ghatak sought to understand the violence done to human subjecthood and relations by the machinations of the nation-state as it draws, and redraws, lines on a map. The specificities that ground Ghataks filmsfrom matters of Bengals history (and the larger history of British colonialism in India), to subtleties of Bengali social hierarchies; from Indias vast cultural trove of mythology, folklore, and music, to their brilliant, if erratic, allusions to Buñuel, Eisenstein, Brecht, and any number of European figures of the avant-gardeare what make them resistant to easy assimilation into Euro-American canons of global art cinema founded upon historicist ideologies. -- Swagato Chakravorty, Los Angeles Review of Books * Praise for Ritwik Ghatak *

Foreword by Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
Chapter
1. A River Called Titas: A Mirror of Our World Today by Ngugi wa
Thiongo
Chapter
2. Ghataks Alluvial Forms by Anjuli Fatima Raza Kolb
Chapter
3. Homeless Intensities: Notes on Narration and the Image in
Subarnarekha by Udaya Kumar
Chapter
4. Old Sound and New Noise: Listening to Ghatak by Nora Alter
Chapter
5. Feet moving in Ghatak: Cinematic Gesture, Political Emergence,
and the Subconscious of Migration by Stefan Jonsson
Chapter
6. The Quest for Gold: Exploring Bari Theke Paliye by Surya Parekh
Chapter
7. Komal Gandhar, Autobiography, Performance by Moinak Biswas
Chapter
8. Reverberations of Discord and Harmony in the key of E-Flat:
Ritwik Ghataks Komal Gandhar by Dudley Andrew
Chapter
9. Ghataks Ajantrik by Richard Peña
Chapter
10. A River Never Lied: Entangled Agencies in Ritwik Ghataks
Films by Gabriele Schwab
Chapter
11. The Final Dialogue by Hari Vasudevan and Satoshi Ukai
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak is university professor in the humanities at Columbia University and the author of many books. Spivak was awarded the 2012 Kyoto Prize in Arts and Philosophy and the 2025 Holberg Prize. In 2013, she received the Padma Bhushan, Indias third-highest civilian award. Surya Parekh is assistant professor in the Department of English at Binghamton University. He is the author of Black Enlightenment. Moinak Biswas is an Indian film scholar and professor of film studies at Jadavpur University, Kolkata. As coordinator of the Media Lab, he researches Indian cinema, edits the Journal of the Moving Image, and is author of Apu and After.