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Monstrosities of Science: Exploring Monster Narratives in Hindi Horror Cinema

Pages 248-261 | Published online: 31 Mar 2015
 

Abstract

Bombay cinema has remained largely aloof from the science-fiction genre. The indigenous Indian space program in the 1970s did not spark the invasion/mutation sub-genre in Hindi cinema the way it had done for Hollywood in the 1950s. Pakistan's scientific endeavors did not prompt national anxieties in India. Yet Hindi cinema has presented viewers with monstrosities begotten by science. This article reconnoiters the Monster/Creature narrative in Hindi cinema and contextualizes the historically specific monstrous visions in two pioneering monster narratives of the 1980s. The horror-inflected Hindi science-fiction genre with its “moral tales of scientific excesses” remains essentially an anti-science discourse.

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Notes on contributors

Meraj Ahmed Mubarki

Meraj Ahmed Mubarki is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mass Communication and Journalism at Maulana Azad National Urdu University, Hyderabad. He has taught at various higher-education institutions across India, within the areas of film studies, Indian cinema genre, advertising practices, and gender studies. Currently he teaches PG courses on Non-Linear Editing, English Journalistic Skills, Advertising and Market Research, and Introduction to Film Studies. He is completing a book on Hindi Horror Cinema. His articles have appeared in Indian Journal of Gender Studies, History and Sociology of South Asia, Media Asia, Contemporary South Asia, and Studies in South Asian Film and Media.

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