Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Zara hatke!: The new middle classes and the segmentation of Hindi cinema

Dwyer, Rachel

Authors

Rachel Dwyer



Contributors

Henrike Donner
Editor

Abstract

Zara hatke! shows how the Indian new middle classes, previously assessed by income or consumption, can be examined by looking at newly differentiated audiences for Hindi films which have emerged in the last two decades. The films cluster along a continuum into three main groups from the Bollywood mainstream Hindi film at one end through the new hatke (‘different’) or multiplex film to the local Hindi film such as the Bhojpuri cinema at the other. The paper concentrates on the hatke films, in particular those of Dibakar Banerjee, to show the emergence of a new middle class sensibility.

Citation

Dwyer, R. (2011). Zara hatke!: The new middle classes and the segmentation of Hindi cinema. In H. Donner (Ed.), Being middle-class in contemporary India: A way of life (184-208). Routledge

Publication Date Jan 1, 2011
Deposit Date May 13, 2010
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Pages 184-208
Book Title Being middle-class in contemporary India: A way of life.
ISBN 9780415671675