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SATYAJIT RAY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   110864


Contours of affinity: Satyajit Ray and the Tagorean legacy / Sengoopta, Chandak   Journal Article
Sengoopta, Chandak Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract This paper seeks to demonstrate the complexities of the Tagorean legacy through a re-examination of Tagore's influence on the filmmaker Satyajit Ray. Reappraising Ray's brief period at Santiniketan and some of his most celebrated engagements with Tagore, the essay argues that contrary to conventional wisdom, Ray was not a wholehearted follower of Tagore but a critical and creative interlocutor. The nuanced interpretation of his relationship with Tagore that Ray himself proffered in his last film Agantuk (1991), the essay suggests, is more persuasive than the exaggerated notions of Ray's Tagoreanism propagated by the vast majority of his biographers and critics.
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2
ID:   112484


Debating radical cinema: a history of the film society movement in India / Majumdar, Rochona   Journal Article
Majumdar, Rochona Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract This paper offers a history of the creation and development of film societies in India from 1947 to 1980. Members of the film society movement consisted of important Indian film directors such as Satyajit Ray, Ritwik Ghatak, Shyam Benegal, Basu Chatterji, Mani Kaul, G. Aravindan, Kumar Shahani, Adoor Gopalkrishnan, and Mrinal Sen, as well as film enthusiasts, numbering about 100,000 by 1980. The movement, confined though it was to members who considered themselves film aficionados, was propelled by debates similar to those that animated left-oriented cultural movements which originated in late colonial India, namely, the Progressive Writers Association in 1936, and the Indian People's Theatre Association in 1942. By looking at the film society movement as an early and sustained attempt at civil-social organization in postcolonial India, this paper highlights the two distinct definitions of 'good cinema'-from an aesthetically sophisticated product to a radical political text-that were debated during the time of the movement.
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