Four-Meter-High Gods and Heroes: Mythological Bodies

The earliest genre of Indian film, the Mythological, presented the gods and heroes from the myths and epics of Hinduism in a new medium, with all the entrancing corporeality that the cinema screen suggested. Audience reception, to be found in an energetic culture of newspaper review, over time expre...

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Main Author: Linda Anne Hemphill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2017-11-01
Series:Indialogs: Spanish Journal of India Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistes.uab.cat/indialogs/article/view/85
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spelling doaj-d4675cbef6d4480c8d692794201e82632021-05-04T16:08:10ZengUniversitat Autònoma de BarcelonaIndialogs: Spanish Journal of India Studies 2339-85232017-11-015092710.5565/rev/indialogs.8554Four-Meter-High Gods and Heroes: Mythological BodiesLinda Anne Hemphill0Independent scholarThe earliest genre of Indian film, the Mythological, presented the gods and heroes from the myths and epics of Hinduism in a new medium, with all the entrancing corporeality that the cinema screen suggested. Audience reception, to be found in an energetic culture of newspaper review, over time expresses not only the changing tastes of a maturing filmic critical faculty, but the way in which this feedback influenced cinematic portrayals, often leading to an eventual transmogrification of beloved characters. The physical representation on the screen of the bodies of divinities and avatars presented different problems to producers as their concerns grew to encompass not only censorship, but competition from other increasingly popular genres; such as the social genre film, in which sexuality could be scrutinized by the audience while pruriently censured. Films of such genres came to accommodate those physical types that had long been a staple of the Mythological genre, its champions and villains, along with its stories; without the growing confusion that the Mythological genre displayed in the physical portrayal of characters, or in faithfulness to character histories or even names. The alterations over the period of the genre’s dominance and decline, to clothing, sexuality and personal relationships, extended to the representation of myth and epic in other mediums, that of picture books and television, the two worlds in which the Mythological genre was reincarnated.https://revistes.uab.cat/indialogs/article/view/85film, mythological, epic, myth, krishna, mahabharata, ramayana, sexuality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linda Anne Hemphill
spellingShingle Linda Anne Hemphill
Four-Meter-High Gods and Heroes: Mythological Bodies
Indialogs: Spanish Journal of India Studies
film, mythological, epic, myth, krishna, mahabharata, ramayana, sexuality
author_facet Linda Anne Hemphill
author_sort Linda Anne Hemphill
title Four-Meter-High Gods and Heroes: Mythological Bodies
title_short Four-Meter-High Gods and Heroes: Mythological Bodies
title_full Four-Meter-High Gods and Heroes: Mythological Bodies
title_fullStr Four-Meter-High Gods and Heroes: Mythological Bodies
title_full_unstemmed Four-Meter-High Gods and Heroes: Mythological Bodies
title_sort four-meter-high gods and heroes: mythological bodies
publisher Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
series Indialogs: Spanish Journal of India Studies
issn 2339-8523
publishDate 2017-11-01
description The earliest genre of Indian film, the Mythological, presented the gods and heroes from the myths and epics of Hinduism in a new medium, with all the entrancing corporeality that the cinema screen suggested. Audience reception, to be found in an energetic culture of newspaper review, over time expresses not only the changing tastes of a maturing filmic critical faculty, but the way in which this feedback influenced cinematic portrayals, often leading to an eventual transmogrification of beloved characters. The physical representation on the screen of the bodies of divinities and avatars presented different problems to producers as their concerns grew to encompass not only censorship, but competition from other increasingly popular genres; such as the social genre film, in which sexuality could be scrutinized by the audience while pruriently censured. Films of such genres came to accommodate those physical types that had long been a staple of the Mythological genre, its champions and villains, along with its stories; without the growing confusion that the Mythological genre displayed in the physical portrayal of characters, or in faithfulness to character histories or even names. The alterations over the period of the genre’s dominance and decline, to clothing, sexuality and personal relationships, extended to the representation of myth and epic in other mediums, that of picture books and television, the two worlds in which the Mythological genre was reincarnated.
topic film, mythological, epic, myth, krishna, mahabharata, ramayana, sexuality
url https://revistes.uab.cat/indialogs/article/view/85
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