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Bombay Cinema's Islamicate Histories
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19 April 2022

Bombay Cinema's Islamicate Histories comprises fourteen essays on the history and influence of cultural Islam on Bombay cinema. These essays are written by major scholars of both South Asian cultural history and Indian cinema working across several continents. Following Marshal Hodgson, the term ‘Islamicate’ is used to describe Muslim cultures in order to distinguish the cultural forms associated with Islam from the religion itself. Such a distinction is especially important to observe in South Asia where, over a thousand-year history, Muslim cultures have commingled with other local religious and cultural traditions to form a rich vein of syncretic aesthetic expression. This volume argues that the influence of Muslim cultures on Bombay cinema can only be grasped against the backdrop of this long history, an argument that informs the shape of the whole.
The book is divided into two sections. The first, ‘Islamicate Histories’, charts the historical roots of South Asian Muslim cultures and the precursors of Bombay cinema’s Islamicate idioms in the Urdu Parsi Theatre, the Courtesan cultures of Lucknow, the traditions of miniature painting, poetry, song and their performance, and the various modes of story-telling that derive from Perso-Arabic traditions. The second section, ‘Cinematic Forms’, discusses the way in which these Islamicate histories are partially constitutive of the traditions of representation, performance and story-telling that give Bombay cinema its distinctive character, traditions that have continued into Bollywood. It explores ‘Islamicate’ genres like the ‘Oriental’ film and the ‘Muslim Social’, as well as forms of poetry and performance like the ‘ghazal’ and ‘the qawwali’.
Bombay Cinema’s Islamicate Histories is published at a time of acute crisis in the perception and understanding of Islam, where Islamophobia stereotypes Muslims as incipient fifth column and Hindu fundamentalism is ascendant. It demonstrates that Muslim and Hindu cultures in India are inextricably entwined and shows how the syncretic idioms of Islamicate cultural history inform the very identity of Bombay cinema, even as that cinema has also instrumentalized Islamicate idioms to stereotype and even demonise the Muslim, especially in contemporary Bollywood.
This book argues that many of the idioms of Bombay cinema that we love are derived from the historical influence of Muslim cultures as they interacted with other traditions in the Indian subcontinent. It traces the emergence of cultures of poetry, dance, song, performance and story-telling out of the thousand-year history of Islam on Indian soil, and describes the ways in which they underlie and inform the expressive forms of Bombay cinema. It is timely to be reminded of the contribution of Muslim cultures to the distinctive and widely recognized popular cinema of India at a historical moment when the cultural influence of Islam on India is being denied by forces which seek to turn the country away from cultural pluralism towards Hindu fundamentalism. Bombay Cinema’s Islamicate Histories features contributions by major scholars of both South Asian cultural history and Indian cinema working across several continents.
The audience for this book will be primarily graduate and advanced undergraduate students of film studies. The writing is accessible and lively and individual chapters will be suitable for classroom use.
It will be of value in disciplines outside film studies, where the Islamicate tradition in general and its impact on film in particular is taught. It will find an audience in disciplines such as history, cultural studies, women's studies, visual studies and South Asian area studies. It will also be of interest to anyone who wants to know how cinema negotiates the parameters of Muslim identity in response to historical and contemporary events in India.
PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, Film history, theory or criticism, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / Genres / General, Films, cinema, Film: styles and genres
'This collection shows how Islamicate cultural forms have been absorbed so fully into Bombay cinema and Bollywood film that it is no longer apparent where certain influences have come from. Each essay unweaves a piece of the complicated tapestry that is Indian society today and it makes a strong and powerful statement: that the history of Islam in India cannot be erased or seen as antithetical to the core identity of the nation without destroying the nation itself.'
Introduction: Bombay cinema’s Islamicate histories
– Richard Allen & Ira Bhaskar
Part One: Islamicate Histories
- Passionate refrains: The theatricality of Urdu on the Parsi stage
Kathryn Hansen
- The Persian Masnavī tradition and Bombay cinema
Sunil Sharma
- Reflections from Padminī’s Palace: Women’s voices of longing and lament in the Sufi romance and Shiʿi elegy
Peter Knapczyk
- Situating the Ṭawāʼif : Nostalgia, Urdu literary cultures and vernacular modernity
Shweta Sachdeva Jha
- Mughal chronicles: Words, images, and the gaps between them
Kavita Singh
- Justice, love and the creative imagination in Mughal India
Najaf Haider
- The ‘Muslim presence’ in Padmaavat
Hilal Ahmed
Part Two: Cinematic Forms
- Ali Baba’s open sesame: Unravelling the Islamicate in Oriental fantasy films
Rosie Thomas
- The textual, musical and sonic journey of the Ghazal in Bombay cinema
Shikha Jhingan
- The Sufi sacred, the Qawwali and the songs of Bombay cinema
Ira Bhaskar
- Avoiding Urdu and the Ṭawāʼif: Re-gendering Kathak dance in Jhanak Jhanak Payal Baaje
Philip Lutgendorf
- The poetics of Pardā
Richard Allen
- Transfigurations of the star body: Salman Khan and the spectral Muslim
Shohini Ghosh
- Terrorism, conspiracy and surveillance in Bombay’s urban cinema
Ranjani Mazumdar