Karamat Presentation G&S
Karamat Presentation G&S
Karamat Presentation G&S
with
Gender
Risako Tominaga and Hamza Karamat
A Transcultural Journey of Dance on Screen
Dance in German
Male gaze and
Expressionism and 01 02 Orientalist gaze
Indian Cinema
Provenance: 1921, sold in India by Sir William Beardsell (d. 1940), through Ananda
Pronston University. (n.d.). The Art Historian as
K. Coomaraswamy (b. 1887 - d. 1947), to the MFA [1]. (Accession date: September
Ethnographer: Photographs from the Ananda K.
1, 1921) Coomaraswamy Archive.
https://researchphotographs.princeton.edu/coom
araswamy-archive/. Accessed on Jan. 28, 2023.
Rabindranath Tagore Vargas-Cetina G. (2020). India and the Translocal
Isadora Duncan
(1861–1941) Modern Dance Scene, 1890s–1950s. Review of
International American Studies, 13(2), 39-59.
(1877-1929)
https://doi.org/10.31261/rias.9805
More Citation Formats
Women in Japanese
No play (能)
Devotional Secular
An earlier cinematic category A later product of civic nationalistic
dating back to films such as Raja sentiment, combining Urdu and Hindi
Harishchandra (1913). as with Pyaasa (1957).
Devotional cinema
Devotional films date back to an early
Indian cinema that derived its
plotlines from epics such as the
Ramayana. Visits to the cinema were
considered a family and/or communal
activity.
Secular Cinema
Derived much of its narrative and
aesthetic principles from prior or
concurrent Hollywood productions.
Both the filmmakers involved and the
plotlines avoided outright religious
overtones on favour of more civic and
contemporary narratives.
A Lasting
Impact
The Partition of Cinema
Indian Cinema
Sarkar, 2012
Rizvi, 2014
Women and Urdu Muslim Elitism
● A successor to the Tawaif archetype.
● An emphasis on submissiveness and modesty.
● Dance sequences usually took place in a mehram
space.
● The narrative of the dance revolved around Hijr
and Visaal.
● Movements and composition were desexualized.
● Accompanying music was often slow and
melodic.
Gazdar, 2019
Kurfürst, 2021
Khan and Ahmad, 2020
Women and Punjabi Cinema
● The flight of capital from the film industry
following the Motion Picture Ordinance of 1979.
● A change in audience from urban elites to a new
wave of working class migrants.
● The mainstreaming of low-budget films,
particularly from within Punjabi and Pashto
theater circles.
● The replacement of traditional actresses with
new talent from the Mujra theater scene.
● The transition from the urban, indoor space to
rural, outdoor settings.
Gazdar, 2019
Khan and Ahmad, 2020
Rizvi, 2014
The Rain Dancer
Queer Coding
The Indoor and Outdoors Space
Kurfürst, 2021
Cook and Johnston, 1982
Rizvi, 2014
Reclamation of the Mujra as ‘indigenous resistance.’
Reclamation of the Mujra as ‘indigenous resistance.’
04
Conclusion
Risako and Hamza
Map of today’s take-away
The US
“New Woman” with Germany
Asian religion & Art
Lang and Dance in
Expressionist Cinema
Pakistan
The impact of the
state on popular
culture.
India Japan
A give and take No Plays and
relationship appropriation into
Western on-screen
performance
Recap and Takeaways
● The orientalist origins of dance in early cinematic depictions.
● The existence of a network of artistic and intellectual exchange between German and Indian
Cinema, among the States, Japan, China....
● The impact of orientalized depictions of dance on Indian and, later, Pakistani cinemas.
● The reappropriation of dance in the modern age as an overtly feminist tool.
● The role of the state as a moral mediator and the (unintended) impact it could have on pop
culture.
● The use of dance within narratives of rebellion against authoritarianism.
● The negotiation between dance as a means of expression versus the demands of the market,
particularly in the field of popular cinema.
●
● R: Did the American feminist dancers succeed with the use of
Oriental gaze in addition to male-gazes
● R: Considering the feminized East, what included “females” in
American Modern dance that appropriated asian art?
● H: Are the cinematic techniques and use of Mujra in the
discussed films a viable route to break from the dominant
cinematic language of Western cinema?
● H: To what extent should the agency of women performers
involved in multilateral productions be considered when
acknowledging the product’s overall feminist merits?
Questions
Resources
Rabe, N. (2017, January 3). How the West came to love Indian film music. Scroll.In.
https://scroll.in/article/698491/how-the-west-came-to-love-indian-film-music
India, T. O. (2012, November 30). The German connection. The Times of India.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/the-german-connection/articleshow/21676452.cms
Tilak, S. B. G. (2017, December 27). A German cinematographer’s love affair with Indian cinema. BBC News.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-42422599
Indian Expressionism – The Fascinating Marriage of Indian and German Cinema. (n.d.). Montréal Serai.
https://montrealserai.com/article/indian-expressionism-the-fascinating-marriage-of-indian-and-german-cinema/
Khan, A., & Ahmad, A. N. (2016). Cinema and Society: Film and Social Change in Pakistan. Oxford University Press.
Resources
Ahmad, A. N., & Khan, A. (2020). Film and Cinephilia in Pakistan: Beyond Life and Death. Oxford University Press.
Mulvey, L. (1975). Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema. Screen, 16(3), 6–18. https://doi.org/10.1093/screen/16.3.6
Rizvi, W. R. (2014). Visual Pleasure in Pakistani Cinema (1947-2014). Social Science Research Network.
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2987743
Rizvi, W. R. (2014). Visual Pleasure in Pakistani Cinema (1947-2014). Social Science Research Network.
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2987743