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Bollywood in the Indian-American diasporaMediating a transitive logic of cultural citizenshipUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, apunathambek{at}wisc.edu This article brings together ethnographic detail and a thematic reading of Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham (K3G) to examine the mediation of consensus regarding Indianness in the diaspora. I argue that K3Gs emotional resonance with viewers in the diaspora is attributable in part to the departure that its narrative marks from Hindi cinemas earlier efforts to recognize and represent expatriate Indians. In positioning and drawing the diaspora into the fold of a great Indian family, K3G articulates everyday struggles over being Indian in the US to a larger project of cultural citizenship that has emerged in relation to Indias tentative entry into a transnational economy and the centrality of the NRI (non-resident Indian) figure to Indias navigation of this space. I argue that this process of mediation follows a transitive logic involving K3Gs representational strategies, first generation Indian immigrants emotional investment in the idea of India and the Indian nation states attempts to forge symbolic and material ties with the expatriate community.
Key Words: audience globalization Hindi cinema identity nation state
International Journal of Cultural Studies, Vol. 8, No. 2,
151-173 (2005) This article has been cited by other articles:
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