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Chinaman, Not Hindustani: Stereotypes and Solidarity in a Hong Kong Film on India

Srinivas, SV (2016) Chinaman, Not Hindustani: Stereotypes and Solidarity in a Hong Kong Film on India. [Book Chapter]

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-94932-8_5

Abstract

This chapter presents a counterintuitive analysis of Himalaya Singh (2005), a film by Hong Kong director Wai Ka-Fai that is built upon the Orientalist stereotypes of India and is criticised by Indian scholars as humiliating and distasteful. By highlighting inter-Asian solidarities, Srinivas shows that the fusion of Hong Kong martial arts with Bollywood music and dance unites the twin paragons of global cinema and permits a new reading of the films as a performative critique of the Orientalising gaze. © 2016, The Author(s).

Item Type: Book Chapter
Publication: Global Cinema
Publisher: Springer
Additional Information: The copyright for this article belongs to Springer.
Keywords: Bengali Speaker; Cultural Commodity; Hindi Language; Indian Cinema; Popular Culture
Department/Centre: Division of Interdisciplinary Sciences > Centre for Society and Policy (formerly: Centre for Contemporary Studies)
Date Deposited: 31 Jan 2023 06:53
Last Modified: 31 Jan 2023 06:53
URI: https://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/79607

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