Mixed feelings: Anglo-Indians and the distribution of the sensible in Indian cinema
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conference contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 08:16authored byG D'Cruz
Hollywood, and various regional cinemas in India typically represent Mixed-Race Anglo-Indians as a degenerate community marked by lax morals, alcoholism, and indolence. These stereotypical tropes typically generate indignant protests from members of this miniscule Indian community, and debates about the representation of Anglo-Indians focus on the injustices propagated by such stereotypes. This paper rethinks Anglo-Indian representation in cinema by drawing on Jacques Rancière’s concept of ‘the distribution of the sensible,’ which provides a cartography for understanding how one’s various identity assignations structure sensory experience. In other words those who are marginalized have ways of seeing and hearing from those occupy normative or dominant subject positions, and these differences are best approached in terms of neo-Kantian aesthetic judgment. It also argues, with Rancière, that ‘inequality’ is built into the distribution of the sensible. Drawing on a number of Indian and Hollywood films — including Aparna Sen’s 36 Chowringhee Lane (1981) Anjan Dutt’s Bada Din (1998) Ismail Merchant’s Cotton Mary (2000), Bow Barracks Forever (2004) and Harry McClure’s Going Away (2013) — the paper contends that Rancière’s ‘distribution of the sensible’ allows us to think through a politics that is connected to ‘aesthetic judgement’ as well as a politics of differentiation that informs our understanding of the function of minoritarian characters in narrative cinema.
History
Pagination
1-4
Location
Glasgow, Scotland
Start date
2014-07-02
End date
2014-07-04
Language
eng
Publication classification
E2.1 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed
Copyright notice
2014, University of Glasgow
Title of proceedings
Proceedings of the 7th annual Film-Philosophy Conference: A World of Cinemas 2014
Event
Film-Philosophy Conference (7th: 2014: University of Glasgow)