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From starry-eyed fans with dreams of fame to cotton entrepreneurs
turned movie moguls, the Bombay film industry has historically
energized a range of practices and practitioners, playing a crucial
and compelling role in the life of modern India. Bombay Hustle
presents an ambitious history of Indian cinema as a history of
material practice, bringing new insights to studies of media,
modernity, and the late colonial city. Drawing on original archival
research and an innovative transdisciplinary approach, Debashree
Mukherjee offers a panoramic portrait of the consolidation of the
Bombay film industry during the talkie transition of the
1920s-1940s. In the decades leading up to independence in 1947,
Bombay became synonymous with marketplace thrills, industrial
strikes, and modernist experimentation. Its burgeoning film
industry embodied Bombay's spirit of "hustle," gathering together
and spewing out the many different energies and emotions that
characterized the city. Bombay Hustle examines diverse sites of
film production-finance, pre-production paperwork, casting,
screenwriting, acting, stunts-to show how speculative excitement
jostled against desires for scientific management in an industry
premised on the struggle between contingency and control. Mukherjee
develops the concept of a "cine-ecology" in order to examine the
bodies, technologies, and environments that collectively shaped the
production and circulation of cinematic meaning in this time. The
book thus brings into view a range of marginalized film workers,
their labor and experiences; forgotten film studios, their
technical practices and aesthetic visions; and overlooked
connections among media practices, geographical particularities,
and historical exigencies.
From starry-eyed fans with dreams of fame to cotton entrepreneurs
turned movie moguls, the Bombay film industry has historically
energized a range of practices and practitioners, playing a crucial
and compelling role in the life of modern India. Bombay Hustle
presents an ambitious history of Indian cinema as a history of
material practice, bringing new insights to studies of media,
modernity, and the late colonial city. Drawing on original archival
research and an innovative transdisciplinary approach, Debashree
Mukherjee offers a panoramic portrait of the consolidation of the
Bombay film industry during the talkie transition of the
1920s-1940s. In the decades leading up to independence in 1947,
Bombay became synonymous with marketplace thrills, industrial
strikes, and modernist experimentation. Its burgeoning film
industry embodied Bombay's spirit of "hustle," gathering together
and spewing out the many different energies and emotions that
characterized the city. Bombay Hustle examines diverse sites of
film production-finance, pre-production paperwork, casting,
screenwriting, acting, stunts-to show how speculative excitement
jostled against desires for scientific management in an industry
premised on the struggle between contingency and control. Mukherjee
develops the concept of a "cine-ecology" in order to examine the
bodies, technologies, and environments that collectively shaped the
production and circulation of cinematic meaning in this time. The
book thus brings into view a range of marginalized film workers,
their labor and experiences; forgotten film studios, their
technical practices and aesthetic visions; and overlooked
connections among media practices, geographical particularities,
and historical exigencies.
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