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Ethical Encounters - Transnational Feminism, Human Rights, and War Cinema in Bangladesh (Hardcover)
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Ethical Encounters - Transnational Feminism, Human Rights, and War Cinema in Bangladesh (Hardcover)
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Ethical Encounters is an exploration of the intersection of
feminism, human rights, and memory to illuminate how visual
practices of recollecting violent legacies in Bangladeshi cinema
can conjure a global cinematic imagination for the advancement of
humanity. By examining contemporary, women-centered Muktijuddho
cinema-features and documentaries that focus on the Bangladesh
Liberation War of 1971-Elora Chowdhury shows how these films
imagine, disrupt, and reinscribe a gendered nationalist landscape
of trauma, freedom, and agency. Chowdhury analyzes Bangladeshi
feminist films including Meherjaan, and Itihaash Konna (Daughters
of History), as well as socially-engaged films by
activist-filmmakers including Jonmo Shathi (Born Together), and
Shadhinota (A Certain Liberation), to show how war films of
Bangladesh can generate possibilities for gender justice. Chowdhury
argues that justice-driven films are critical to understanding and
negotiating the layered meanings and consequences of catastrophic
human suffering yet at the same time they hint at subjectivities
and identities that are not reducible to the politics of suffering.
Rather, they are key to creating an alternative and disruptive
archive of feminist knowledge-a sensitive witnessing, responsible
spectatorship, and just responsibility across time, and space.
Drawing on Black and transnational feminist critiques, Chowdhury
explores questions around women's place, social roles, and modes of
participation in war as well as the visual language through which
they become legible as victims/subjects of violence and agents of
the nation. Ethical Encounters illuminates the possibilities of
film as a site to articulate an ethics that acknowledges a founding
violence of the birth of a nation, recuperates it even if in
fragments, and imagines differently the irreconcilable relationship
between humanity, liberty, and justice.
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