Thanks to Bollywood, a Non-Resident Indian (NRI) is predominantly imagined, back home in India, as super-rich, fully westernized in manners and doing India proud in foreign lands. One reason for this as explained by renowned Bollywood producer-director Late Yash Chopra, in his address at the first Pravasi Bharatiya Divas (Expatriate Indians Day) in 2003, is that as a director he is also working as a ‘historian’ and carrying on his shoulders the ‘moral responsibility [ … ] to depict India [and the Indian Diaspora] at its best’. In this regard, Ghassan Hage also notes that the ‘last thing’ the migrants (particularly men) would like to share with their families back home is shocking stories about racism, discrimination or prejudices that they may have experienced in public or the workplace. Such a revelation would obviously be followed by ‘why did you make us suffer and move to the end of the world just to get demeaned and insulted?’ Hage further notes that therefore the migrants’ familial and class experiences, be it in films, literature or even some sociological studies, are often ‘portrayed as a positive experience’ and this is ‘how the whole migratory enterprise continues to legitimise itself’'. It could be argued that this is one of the reasons the alleged ‘racist’ attacks against Indian students received so much attention in the Indian media. It was not just discrimination but the notion of discrimination and second class treatment (based on skin colour and origin) against the revered and much envied diasporic Indian that created such a media furor in India.
History
Pagination
3 - 18
Location
Melbourne, Vic.
Open access
Yes
Start date
2013-03-21
ISSN
1838-2126
eISSN
1838-2118
Language
eng
Publication classification
EN Other conference paper
Copyright notice
2013, Deakin University, Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation.
Editor/Contributor(s)
F Mansouri, V Marotta
Title of proceedings
CCG Research Paper Series July 2013 : Re-mapping caste and class consciousness : Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation Research Paper Series Vol. 4, No. 2 July 2013