Saturday, 4 March 2017

Representation of LGBT in Parallel Cinema

          Representation of   LGBT in Parallel Cinema  
                                 Komal Shahedadpuri
          Department of English MK Bhavnagar university                            
Abstract

         Rohit K. Dasgupta has rightly observed that ‘established academic debates surrounding representation of queer identities in India have time and again illuminated the relationship between sexual (gendered) subjectivities and the state. More often than not queer individuals themselves have fixated on heteronormativising their queerness.’ While most would prefer to ‘fit in’ for socio-cultural and political progress, the radical queer activists and scholar challenge the ‘norm’ for a different kind of progression. Similarly, Gayatri Gopinath argues that ‘wither the queer woman is erased from patriarchal nationalist rhetoric that refuses her existence or she is colonized by a liberalist western discourse of  sexuality that seeks to codify her subjectivity through indexes of ‘gay’ and ‘lesbian’. (R. K. Dasgupta)

Through the lenses of these observation, this paper attempts to look into lesbian and gay identities as portrayed in a serious way in two films of Parallel Cinema FIRE (1996) by diasporic Canadian filmmaker Deepa Mehta and ‘BOMgAY’(1996) by Riyad Wadia.

Key Words: Lesbian, Gays, Queer Film , Fire, Dostana, BolBachan
                                                                                                    Queer Theory
       
       Queer Theory is a field of poststructuralist critical theory that emerged in the early 1990s, out of the fields of Queer studies and women’s studies .Queer theory builds both upon Feminist challenges to the idea that gender is part of essential self and upon Gay and Lesbian studies. It focuses on mismatches between sex or gender and desire,  Since early 1990s,it has been adapted by gays and lesbians themselves as a non-invidious term to identify a way of life and an area of scholarly inquiry. These studies have maintained a close relation to the activists who strive to achieve for gays and lesbians political, legal and  economic rights equal to those of the heterosexual majority.

Portrayal of LGBT through Parallel Cinema
     
        The portrayal of LGBT is not essay task in India because homosexuality is mostly  a taboo subject in Indian civil  society and for the government section 377 of Indian penal code makes sex with persons of same gender punishable by law , LGBT people in India face legal and social difficulties, sexual activity between people of same gender is illegal and same sex  couples can’t legally marry or obtain a civil partnership. A critical moment of rapture in Indian Queer sexuality occurred with the released of Deepa Mehta’s  ‘Fire’ (1996), which shows that  queer sexuality is not visible within the culture of India through a dialogue between major two characters Radha and Sita that ‘There is no word in our language that can describe what we are and how we feel for each other’ said Sita. Michael Foucault  also agree with Mehta’s views that sexuality based identity were invented in 19th century in Europe.

Indian Cinema (Films)
   
      Film scholars argued that films are not just visual images shown to the audience but that they have capacity to overpower and influence the spectator. With the help of textual and cinematic codes, the films present meaning in such a way that they match with our understanding of the real world, as if co-constructing our reality connecting us to our history, experience and social milieu.  Today it becomes significant cultural artifact in the study of identities and sexualities. Indian Cinema has always been a mirror image of the Cultural, Socioeconomic and the Political transform  that emerged in the nation. This shows that reel life and real life are so inclined towards each other. Indian film industry has a rich history of producing a variety of movies showcasing different spheres of Indian life in myriad themes.

Analysis of ‘Fire’ by Deepa Mehta


       The Indian filmmaking Culture somehow still appears confused  towards forming a universal opinion about projecting homosexual characters. Deepa Mehta, ’Westernized’ Non Residential Indian film maker. However, most of the criticism that followed its release in India protest against sexual intimacy between two ‘Hindu’, Indian middle class women.  It was 1996s, ‘Fire’ tells a tale of two women’s journey of exploration of the desire. A  film served a sensual echo coddle in an Indian context while also scooping itself out of the Patriarchal Prevalence. This film is written and directed by Deepa Mehta and staring Shabana Azami and Nandita Das. It is a first installment of Mehta’s  Elements Trilogy. It is followed by Earth(1998) and Water(2005).’Fire’ is loosely based on Ismat Chugtai’s 1941 Urdu short story, Lihaaf  (The Quilt).It was one of the first mainstream films in India to explicitly show homosexual relations. This movie helped mainstreaming homosexuality in India. It tells a tale of lesbian relationship which was first of its kind in Indian Cinema.

Reinterpretation of Indian Myths and Traditions with aspect of Lesbianism in a movie ‘Fire’
    
       Radha and Sita are two major characters of a movie that are represented as Indian women caught in an oppressive web of commitments of Family, arranged Marriages, and traditional Patriarchal notions of duty. Many critics describe ‘Fire’ as the story of “the two unhappy housewives compelled to seek emotional and sexual satisfaction from each other because their husband provides none”. Ashok turns towards Celibacy and Jatin loves other Chinese girl Julie. The Film narratives open with a story within story style in which  Radha’s mother told the story of people who are sad as they can’t see ocean and added that an old  woman in the village comforts people by saying, “What you can’t see, you can see. You just have to see without looking”. Radha’s initial musing captures the Political problematic that lies at the heart of the film. This scene serves as a mystery that Radha is able unravel only after being ‘tested’ by the ‘fire’ at dramatic turn of events. The ‘sexual’ choice then becomes merely a medium for film to make that statement, the representation and Visibility of non western queer female desire, what is interesting about the statement is the seemingly innocuous distinction  between “seeing” and  “looking”. on the other hand, Mehta’s film contests the discursive polemic of Visibility outside the home. Instead, she traces the domestic and filial orientations of being a queer subject.
      
      ‘Fire’ is a film that questions Traditions, its about being ‘alive’ and women defining their liberation in their own terms. ‘Fire’ reworks some age old myths that have often been used in oppress Indian women and reclaims them in a feminist voice. Its first Indian mainstream film with overt lesbian theme ,and its bold offering of an alternative vision for Indian women is extremely threatening to the patriarchal system. This film revolves around Indian joint family in New Delhi which representative of traditional India. There are few  myths that are reworked within the film. Mehta uses these myths as backdrop of her  film but does so by interpreting them in ways that might be considered as Sacrilegious. The official webpage of ‘Fire’ emphasis the film’s intent of re-envisioning the myth of ‘Sita’.
      
       “An intense moving and sensuous portrait of change in contemporary India. Fire’ focuses on several generations of a modern day New Delhi family. A reworking of a story from the Classic Hindu Ramayana, Fire recounts  the family’s struggle to cope with the pressures of great individual and personal Freedom while maintaining allegiance to traditional value.” (Fire, official webpage,1997)

       Therefore, Mehta’s attempt to rework myths provide an extremely  empowering vision for Indian women and their reality. Three important myths are reworking in ‘Fire’, myth of Sita, myth of Radha and myth of Karva chauth.   

  Myth of ‘Sita’, mythical figure in Ramayana, had to give trial by fire to prove her purity and obedience towards her husband. In a film, three times it refer, first when Mundu (servant) give reason that why he and Biji are being so emotional to see the Ramayana, secondly it enacted through Ramleela where Ashok and Swamiji were present in which  a role of ‘Sita’(mythical figure)played by a man which provides set up for the film and specially for  relation of Radha and Sita, Sita somehow presented as man and  final symbolic episode where Radha has to undergo  a similar trial by fire to prove her purity. ‘fire’ is considered sacred in the Hindu tradition. Mehta transform the myth which has traditionally been used against Indian Women to instill fear about their  purity and honor where is no freedom for expression or individual Independence, but in the film two women defy society’s idea about how they should be living their lives. Therefore, Fire is used to sanction the union of the two women. Radha’s victorious emergence from the flames that can discern pure from the impure works to place the two women in a space of righteous morality even as they reject society’s ideas about morality and forge their path together.   This myth  ,which underlines the entire film is used to sanction their Choices. As in public Debate, Mehta noted that
 “I can’t have my film hijacked by anyone organization. It is not about Lesbianism, it is about Loneliness, about Choices.”(quoted in Madhu Jain with Sheela, A Raval, ‘Ireover’ Fire, New Delhi,1998)

Myth of Radha, in Hindu mythology, Radha was the consort of the of the God Krishna. Although, Radha married to another cowherder, she was Krishna’s  constant companion. Therefore , Radha may be seen as the epitomy of women, the ultimate consort and seducer. However, the love that she and  Krishna shared is also used to symbolize mutual love between God and human Soul.(Caitanya movement, form of Hinduism)The mythological Radha is embodied in the character of Sita in the film. She is one who acts her desires and take initiative with  character of Radha in the film. Although, she married to Jatin, she is Radha‘s constant companion. Mehta has interchanged the names of her two main characters with the mythological figures they represent. It’s the character of Radha who embodies the Goddess Sita, while the character of Sita who embodies mythical Radha. Mehta is making a very important statement by  interchanging the names of the two women. Mehta intimates that two characters are different parts of united whole, both characters Radha (a pure) and Sita (the desirous)are  one dimensional, split-reactions to a suffocating tradition, Mehta allows for fluidity  between different and multiple possibilities , The pure and the desirous are no longer separate. They are two aspects of one. This interpretation questions the original myths.   

  Myth of Karva Chauth
    

     The story of this, is told by Radha, and visualized by Mundu , this scene place the entire myth in a comedic  light. Radha ends the story by commenting
Radha: So now you know why we fast? To prove how loyal and devoted we are to our husbands.

Sita : what a wimp! I mean the queen and as for the king. I think he’s a real Jerk. (ask Radha) what do you think?

Radha : I don’t know, she didn’t have many choices.

Sita:  I’m so sick of all this devotion, we can find choices
                                                                                                   (Fire,1996)

     In this, Radha stresses word ‘choice’ and looks at Sita ,the act suggesting that Radha has a choice and that is Sita. Expressing her dislike for meaningless traditions to keep fast for husbands to show your loyalty towards them, Sita declares “I am sure we can find choices”. Sita and Radha thus offer a critique of the notion of “compulsory heterosexuality”, theorized by Adrienne Rich. Mehta uses Sita’s character effectively to comment on age old Indian myths that are oppressive to women. As last dialogue of Sita shows as modern India. The reinterpretation of myths to empower women is very powerful device in ‘Fire’. The film allows Indian women to re-envision different possibilities by providing alternative readings to different myths, it challenges the idea that there is only one way to read these myths, the film ‘Fire’ highlights one possible strength of deconstructing the myths.
   
    Subeshini Moodley comments that “Mehta’s women characters undergo journeys of Identity. They Travel from being obedient, dutiful, virtuous women who honor family to women who step outside of tradition to become empowered, decision maker.”

   Traditions, also reinterpreted in movie, it demonstrate various Indian customs and rearticulates them in an empowering light for the benefit of Indian women. It highlights spaces of intimacy between women which is already exist in an old Indian culture like

 1) It’s an old Indian custom for women to oil each other’s hair which found in the film when Sita ask to oil her hair to Radha but it show erotic nature of customs and this sequence framed and shot through a full length dressing mirror.

2) Another tradition is that dancing with partners of the same sex, its very common on Indian stage because Physical contact between members of opposite sex was not allowed. As Radha and Sita danced erotically in front of Biji in the house, its uncommon acknowledgement of “too much electricity” (Mundu).


3) Custom of wearing Bangles , exchange of it, of dressing each other is constantly enacted by young girls and women who considered to platonic friends, However in film Radha and Sita exchange bangles the day after their first make love as Radha transformed by Desire with Sita wearing bangles in common kitchen.  Mehta uses the exchange  to invoke other traditions  like the act of putting bangles on each other’s hands is clearly reminiscent of       exchange of marriage garlands. The myth about the effects of certain spices like Cardamom on sexual power in public might seem extremely daring in a western context, but in Indian context homosexuality is completely silent even as a film strives to give a voice to that reality.


4) Other scene that uses the Indian custom to massage feet of our elders (also husbands) in film Sita offers to massage Radha ‘s feet on family picnic , to see that Ashok being happy and says “I am lucky to have such a good Family” but  only Sita and Radha knows the Irony. However , it reinterpreted as Sita touches Radha’s feet in sensual ways. Gopinath, in her essay discuss how Fire offers politics of subversion through the homoeroticized act of giving massage in the most heterosexual space like park.


5) Even’ girlhood game of  buch is sexualized when Radha and Sita playing together in extremely sensual moment, Radha picks up the drop of sweat, from Sita’s leg and tastes it, its provide new spin on an old game. In an interview, Deepa Mehta comments on this scene that “Fire is really about sensuality for me what you don’t see is far more erotic  that  what you see. I love eroticism but it has to be subtle. In the scene where Radha takes a bead of Sita’s sweat and tastes it that extremely erotic for me. Both of them have their cloths on” (Sidhwa,1997)
        
      One of the greatest strength of the film , that while it challenges and re-envision  Indian traditions, Radha and Sita continue to exist and act within an Indian context. They don’t turn towards the West as source of their liberation , they visit Nizammudin shrine rather than go to movie, we see them inventing a tradition in their own unique way. There is one question may arise in our mind that why Deepa Mehta made movie on only lesbian not on gay. So, it’s answer can found from her comment in an interview that “this story is not an autobiography but it is based on what I knew of my mother’s life being brought into a joint household often an arranged marriage . I know that she had bonded with the other woman and I wondered what would happen for women in the ‘90s.”(Bowen, 1996) Mehta’s story questions centuries of Indian Philosophy which teaches that “Desire is the root of all evils.”(Ashok speaks) but ‘Fire’ defies entire premise  As Radha finally declares “without Desire , there’s no point in living.”

The use of space, Time, Light and other major terms that include in film studies in ‘Fire’

          Films, are carefully constructed visual objects and each elements of that construction can function to generate meaning because  Audio- visual speaks more than words, and its effect is create more  interest to the story. The primary elements of meaning in film are composition ,editing and art direction which encompasses everything from color and sound to set and Location.
  
       A large portion of film ‘Fire’ is shot in the house  ,the visual spaces in the film are constantly enclosed or framed to reflect the claustrophobia of the women’s lives. The second scene of the film opens with a frame within frame shot revealing young couple is leaning against the wall to face each other giving apparently an archetypal image of a romantic heterosexual couple formation then camera moves to capture Sita standing before classic monument, Taj Mahal. However’ as the love the two women share opens up, Its captured by the close shot of camera. Various spaces used like we see them in the park, at the shrine and in the market. It is open terrace space which becomes the women’s exclusive territory where they go to breath outside the air of oppression of their marriage for fresh and free air and it became physical manifestation of the intimate space they create together. Nizammudin Shrine is a place where they visit in spite of they are belong to Hindu family they go to shrine because somehow they find respect of their relations as they engage in Qawaali which is of love between God and humans ,as they heard one line that “I am in you, you are in me” in Sufism almost all poems have one theme that is love, while  not even single Hindu Temple found in movie. So, through the archetype use of shrine we hoped that Radha and Sita can united and they united at the end.
    
      Major terms like Neorealism, sequence of different scenes and art  direction  in which symbolic use of color, design, sound ,lighting, music etc used in film  like the Red color of Sita’s sari and other things of her beauty like bindi ,bangles etc are considered as holy things for married women. The transitions in the film, often a white out to a flashback of one particular scene in Radha’s childhood psyche, are used to disrupt linear time and as a foreshadowing device. Throughout the film, the flashback serves as a device that sets the tone of events to come or pose a question. For example towards the end of the film, we see Radha in the flames, the film flashes back to young Radha finally learning how to “see” the ocean in a field of Mustard flowers, exclaiming’ I can see the ocean, I can see it.” The audience is suspended in a moment of wonder about whether the flashback signifies that Radha is dead and therefore can finally see? The very next shot change the perception of audience that its shows her reunion with Sita at the same shrine where Sita wished that both of them never parted. Its shrine  that accept them as there is use of rain and lighting as the impossible being possible at the end. Finally, Radha envision an alternative life for Sita and herself. In addition to flashback techniques , light is used to disrupt time and create ambiguity in the certain scenes . The time of the day is often unclear in the film. For example, the scene following their first time love, making seems bright enough to indicate morning , when Sita leaves Radha’s room , it becomes obvious that it is still dark outside. This effect is crested through the use of day for night or night for day light.
   
     Near the end of the film, Ashok sit near the store where on the wall the word “Crush” capture which relates his situation after Knowing the truth. fire as a device used to show the aspect of fertility ,sexuality and enlightenment.

Controversies with released ‘Fire’
       
        Fire opened across India in mainstream cinema as path breaking film in winter 1998. The film recorded 80% collections in three weeks until trouble that  visited it on November 25, two dozen men of the Jain Samata Vahni of  Mumbai wanted Maharashtra’s minister of state of cultural affairs Anil Deshmukh to ban the film but failed. On 1 December Shiv Sainiks ransacked cinema theatre in Goregaon, Mumbai. Goyal, Delhi chief of Shiv Sena said, “ The film insulted Radhaji and Sitaji and Ramayana, it hurts the sentiments of Hindus but did they listen?” and right winged groups wanted protagonist’s name changed to Nita from Sita which is found in Hindi version of movie.  Bal Thackeray, a leader of Shiv Sena party in Bombay asserting during the release of the film, “Fire may have international awards  but will anyone deliberate on the  harm these people are doing by ushering in a wretched culture, also noted that the depiction of Lesbianism was a direct attack on out Hindu culture and civilization”. In response to this Mehta argues that lesbianism is part of Indian heritage with historical narrations and legitimate representation. while Brinde Bose  argues that Fire primarily evoke to define homoerotism in order to define feminist resistance to patriarchy  construction of female sexuality because the issue of lesbianism hasn’t been accepted like male homosexuality. The Film helped to gave the voice to lesbians that the most important verdict for Fire came from audience,
 “ That night after Fire was attacked, there was a Virgil by candlelight at the Regal, As far as eye could see, there were  women and men with placards that said ‘we are Indians and we are Lesbians.” To see this Mehta said ‘ I was like ,’Holy shit, this is cool,’ and she sums up by saying in an interview, “I think the film had an incredible impact on young people of all communities, because they are fighting something also. I might not be traditional values but some bias or injustice . Everybody has this want and basically Fire is a film about desire. You have to ask yourself, ‘what do I want? We’ve all been taught to go for what we need, I say it’s more import to go for what you want.” (Sidhwa,1997)

‘BOMgAY’ by Riyad Wadia and Jangu Sethna
     

        Bomgay is a bold and brilliant 1996 Indian anthology of short film, the film stars Kushal Punjabi and Rahul Bose. It  is known for its controversial  gay sex scene in a library. It is a collection of six cinematic adaptations based on Raja Rao’s selected  gay poems inaugurated the era of queer cinema in India , about “Mumbai  same sex sub cultural life”. It was first screened at Bombay’s National centre for the Arts in December. According  to Thomas Waugh , it is one of the very rare Indian Parallel films that might be called ‘queer’ in Euro-American sense this film is Twelve minutes long ,collection of six short film, its India’s first gay film which closely and openly portray the gay culture or the subject of homosexuality in India. All vignettes are variously heavy and light about Mumbai same sex subculture life. Film is first but also as an entry point to a much larger discussion of Indian Parallel Cinema.

Textual Reading of the Film
   
       The film has been severely criticized by many for its extravagant and fantastic portrayal of gay men in India which is far from the Truth but according to Wadia himself, he was attempting to portray the emergence of  a small gay community that dwells in Bombay and who choose to interpret  the word “gay”  as practiced and loosely define the westernized lens is evident in the aesthetics that govern the film. In the title vignette “Bomgay”, the queer subculture of Mumbai is identified through the sampling of the oriental fetishism of  western tourist. Rao problematizes same sex closeness  in India by location it in the public  culture.            

Family members
From England, America and Canada
visit you at Bombay
which  they call Bomgay
some of them are sex tourists
you their post colonial pimp
Hungry for pounds and dollars
                                             (Bomgay poem)
          
        This vignette present a gay male New Yorker as the ‘sex tourist’  and introduced as ‘ Family’  who visit Bombay, for them it’s a place where more gays are found, so they call it Bomgay which creates the image of Bombay to the outsiders. The narrator presents as post colonial pimp who took them to show that places in Bombay only for the hunger of dollars and pounds , they appeals customers  (tourist)for Prostitution. If the narrator took  them at religious places like Gokul but only main three sites  of homoerotic expression in the Mumbai landscape  pleases them more that are western style gay clubs, men’s public toilets on plateform-2 of Dadar station and finally steeple of Apsara Theatre.(Waugh,2002), these three sites can be connected as well as “strangely familiar with each other. The last line that ‘God’s own  penis mightier than the sword’ represent the queer subject very openly and clearly with the words that are usually not allowed to films or in literature. Because of these language the film face many problems. Bomgay complicates some of these issues, while it present the Phallic significance of the Apsara Theatre which sex tourist love the most.
     
        It also places queer representation very firmly within upper class sensibility like in a vignette ‘Opinion’ , a men is seen reading newspaper while gazing from superior  position at his maidservant ‘Shantabai’ who comes once a day to wash undies , she thinks that man without wife and kids is nothing ,its represent the picture of habits of Gujaratis, that they are always free to  worry about others and interfere in other’s life like they are single or married  why they are still  single though eligible etc. First line ,‘ Onions and Opinions are cheap in Bombay’ means you easily get opinions from others if you want or nor doesn’t matter people free to give their opinions. Its  not only about Bombay but everywhere In India or somehow outside India also because human nature is same everywhere. The protagonists in other vignettes are tie wearing ,office goers, college students in orgiastic fantasies in scorning gay locals in Mumbai. These show the superior or upper position of gays.
   
           While in a ‘Underground’ another vignette, the picture of lower class gay community and their lifestyle  is portrayed. It describe the scene of railway lines opposite Dharavi slum  in Bombay that as in old days the touch of men who belonged to lower class or caste like Untouchables polluted, now is becomes  virtues for gays. It said that goo has its own uses as ripe harvest and fertilized by defecting humans, it use as a object with which the memories of gay lovers who met in an underground  urinal to hide from society ‘The underground has its own shade’ means that the gay community which represent by underground has their own existence and choices. In Bombay, its small world for gay community which creates by Wadia in Bomgay ,its far from truth but represent gay’s individual world where their relations are allowed that their found their garden of Eden.  Through the insightful Imagery like the gay cruising spots of Victorian Terminus urinals and the Bombay local tracks along which people defecate it emerging gay community in post-liberalized India of the 1990s.So, in this the repressed voice of gays is highlighted.
    
        ‘Lefty’ is important for its Library sequence , visual utopia of over abundance is clearly visible in this sequence which is shot in dimly lit colonial style library with huge mirrors. The library is far from being liberating space but Wadia recreates and stylizes  queer representation in Library, the narrator comments how Lefty is stared at by the readers for writing with its left hand , following this narrator says, “speaking isn’t  allowed in Library but looking is” whish is read against the backdrop of Rahul sodomised by Kushal. Its place for reading, peace, knowledge , discipline etc but Wadia make use of this to portray gay scene as it very stressful shot of Library sequence supervising location had to be distracted and away while the actors got nude and simulate sex, hiding from Librarian. So this scene because of location, creates controversy . St. Wilson College Library thus contributes to the private display of queer desire and it does this alongside scripts of everyday  institutional life.
   
    “The purity of love subverted , the twisted soul escapes into a world of fantasy. The individual spirit purges itself by reveling in its  victimization. The love that dare not speak its name, now sits across table and debates it cause. The protagonists are self respect and accountability. The antagonists hypocrisy and self denial.” (Bomgay,1996) This lines present, how the film raise the voice of gay community and show that in  the society, their relations are not accepted. So the use of utopian world of liberty for gays give them self existence and choices of sex in life. Aesthetically, Wadia’s film also demonstrate that utopian made of liberation, releases the self from  the control of conformist society. So this film screened in numbers of film festivals but the film has limited release in India as Wadia did not apply for a certificate fearing that the Censor board would reject it.
    
      Thus, these two films represent the issues related to LGBT which is have to come as demand of time after 1990s, before that there is no that much realistic and serious portrayal of it as done in these films. Parallel Cinema aided a lot to these issues to came into  the light, it is bold enough to represent controversial issues very clearly and openly in India through media or film. While today’s bollywood movies make fun of these characters like in Dostana, Bol Bachan etc. Today, LGBTs are still suffered from many problems to exist in the Indian society.
                                               
Works Cited

The film ‘Fire’ by Deepa Mehta

The Glossary of Literary Terms by M.H Abrams




Articles, on Indian Cinema Now and Then by Partha Chatterjee and on Talkies, movies and cinema by Shyam Benegal

An article ‘A New Fire in an old Tradition’ by Sheena Malhotra  and Kathryn Sorrells.  (csun.edu)

‘Igniting Desires’,  Politicizing Queer Female Subjectivities in Fire by Senthorum Raj Intersection: Gender and Sexuality in Asia and the Pacific Issue 28, March 2012.  (http://intersections.anu.edu.au/issue28/raj.htm)   

A  book , An Introduction to Criticism , Literature and Film Culture by Michael Ryan  “ Film Studies”.

Queer Sexuality : A Cultural Narrative of India’s Historical Archive by Rohit K Dasgupta , University of the Arts London.

Journal of Religion and Film, Volume 17 Issue 2  October 2013  Fire, Water and The Goddess : The Films of Deepa Mehta and  Satyajit  Ray as  Critiques of Hindu Patriarchy  , David F. Burton, Canterbury  Christ Church University, 


An Article, ‘Keeping flame alive: what made Deepa Mehta’s Fire such a Path breaking film’ , written by Dipanita Nath and  published on March 20,2016 in Indian Express.

The ‘Gay’ Fictive City: Queer Imagination in the Cinematic Space by Sagorika Singha  from  Jawaharlal Nehru University, India in ‘The Apollonian’, A Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies.

‘Queer Kinship in New Queer India: From Wadia’s ‘BOMGAY’ to R. Raja Rao’s  ‘Crocodile Tears’ by Rohit K Dasgupta  (Chapter Three)

An Article ‘Long Life of a Short Film’ by Riyad Vinci Wadia

Google Books, https:www.google.co.in/search?tbm=bks&hl=en&q=Bomgay+

PhD Thesis on  ‘A Semiotic Investigation of Positioning of the Queer In Indian Film Narratives by Sachin Ramesh Labade

     




           

 


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