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ID084229
Title ProperA Line in the Sand
Other Title Informationthe India-Pakistan Border in the Films of J.P Dutta
LanguageENG
AuthorAthique, M Adrian
Publication2008.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines the visualisation and narrative construction of the India-Pakistan border, and human interactions across that liminal space, as depicted in two films directed by J.P. Dutta, the high-profile, multiple award-winning war film Border (1997) and his subsequent feature Refugee (2000), which was more loosely described in its publicity literature as 'a human story'. 1 Through these films, Dutta established his reputation as the leading Indian director of the 'war film', a genre marked by its relative absence in the Indian cinema prior to the 1990s. Both Border and Refugee thus constitute part of what has retrospectively been described as Dutta's 'war trilogy' (along with the more recent LOC Kargil of 2003, which focuses on the 1999 Himalayan conflict). 2 In the first two films of the set, which I will consider here, the border in question is not the Line-of-Control (LOC) that divides Kashmir, but rather the southern portion of the long border with Pakistan that runs from the southern bank of the Sutlej River across the Thar Desert to the Arabian Sea. Refugee, moreover, is not a war film in the accepted sense, and I will make the argument that it is not so much the martial posturing which constructs the thematic inter-relation of the two films considered here but rather their attempts to naturalise the abstract barrier created by the Radcliffe Line in the west.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 31,No. 3 ; Dec 2008 :p472-499.
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 31,No. 3 ; Dec 2008 :p472-499.
Key WordsIndia ;  Pakistan ;  Border ;  Film ;  Kashmir ;  West Punjab ;  Maintaining Boundaries