Description: "For over forty years, Shyam Benegal has been one the leading forces in Indian cinema. Informed by a rich political and philosophical sensibility and a mastery of the craft of filmmaking, Benegal is both of, and not of, Bollywood. Focusing on its philosophical depth, Samir Chopra identifies three key aspects of Benegal's oueuvre: a trio of films which signalled to middle-class India that a revolt was brewing in India's hinterlands; two sets of movies which make powerful feminist statements and showcase strong female characters; and Benegal's interpretation, 'translation', and reimagining of literary works of diverse provenances and artistic impulses"--
Brief description: Samir Chopra is Professor of Philosophy at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, USA. He is author of A Legal Theory for Autonomous Artificial Agents (2011) and Brave New Pitch: The Evolution of Modern Cricket (2012).
Review Quotes:
"Samir Chopra's fine-grained analyses of Shyam Benegal's prolific output does great justice to the filmmaker's intellectual reach and ambitions, putting Benegal's deeply committed visions of social and gender justice in conversation with what Chopra calls "philosophy in cinematic form"-"expressions," that is, "of a moral and political philosophy" enacted via the medium of cinema. Those looking for a compelling reading of Benegal's substantial oeuvre will also find much to enjoy and ruminate over in Shyam Benegal: Philosopher and Filmmaker." --Anuradha Needham, Donald R. Longman Professor of English and Cinema Studies, Oberlin College, USA
"For over four decades, India's celebrated filmmaker Shyam Benegal's films have delighted audiences even as they chasten the social order-one that hurls indignities at those perceived as social outcasts. Unfiltered and unfettered by the weight of ideological prisms, Benegal's films speak through the body of women at the margins, revealing her resistance in speech and action. Samir Chopra brings us closer to the legendary filmmaker and his films. Chopra curates a selection of Benegal's films and persuades us to see films as "philosophy in action" and rumination in celluloid. This smart book has much to offer to the novice as well as film enthusiasts familiar with India's cinema." --Ritu Gairola Khanduri, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Texas at Arlington, USA