Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

In Search of a Feminist Voice in Selected Films of Ritwik Ghatak

View through CrossRef
This paper undertakes a critical examination of the feminine voice in the films of Ritwik Ghatak, with a specific focus on Meghe Dhaka Tara (1960), Komal Gandhar (1961), and Subarnarekha (1965), collectively known as Ghatak’s Partition Trilogy. While Ghatak is widely regarded for foregrounding the Partition of Bengal and the plight of refugees, this study shifts the lens to explore how female subjectivity is constructed, silenced, or symbolically represented within his cinematic universe. Drawing from feminist film theory and discourse analysis, particularly the frameworks developed by Laura Mulvey and Jennifer Coates, the research investigates the subtle deliveries and interruptions of the feminine voice in the narrative, visual, and sonic structure of Ghatak’s films. It explores how characters such as Nita, Anusuya, and Sita navigate gendered spaces, express emotional labor, and encounter structural constraints shaped by patriarchy, nationalism, and social constructs. Methodologically, the study adopts a qualitative interpretive approach, conducting close textual readings of scenes to trace feminine agency through voice, silence, gesture, dialogue, and metaphor. The analysis identifies recurring patterns of moral objectification, sacrificial narrative arcs, and representations, alongside moments of resistance and disagreements that render the feminine voice temporarily visible. The findings suggest that Ghatak’s cinema, though not explicitly feminist, operates within a liminal space where female subjectivity is utilized according to its social constructs. His women are not merely victims of Partition but become symbolic repositories of collective trauma, cultural continuity, and existential longing. This paper contributes to Indian feminist film discourse by reassessing Ghatak’s works through a gendered lens, emphasizing the urgency of listening to women’s silences within national and cinematic narratives.
Title: In Search of a Feminist Voice in Selected Films of Ritwik Ghatak
Description:
This paper undertakes a critical examination of the feminine voice in the films of Ritwik Ghatak, with a specific focus on Meghe Dhaka Tara (1960), Komal Gandhar (1961), and Subarnarekha (1965), collectively known as Ghatak’s Partition Trilogy.
While Ghatak is widely regarded for foregrounding the Partition of Bengal and the plight of refugees, this study shifts the lens to explore how female subjectivity is constructed, silenced, or symbolically represented within his cinematic universe.
Drawing from feminist film theory and discourse analysis, particularly the frameworks developed by Laura Mulvey and Jennifer Coates, the research investigates the subtle deliveries and interruptions of the feminine voice in the narrative, visual, and sonic structure of Ghatak’s films.
It explores how characters such as Nita, Anusuya, and Sita navigate gendered spaces, express emotional labor, and encounter structural constraints shaped by patriarchy, nationalism, and social constructs.
Methodologically, the study adopts a qualitative interpretive approach, conducting close textual readings of scenes to trace feminine agency through voice, silence, gesture, dialogue, and metaphor.
The analysis identifies recurring patterns of moral objectification, sacrificial narrative arcs, and representations, alongside moments of resistance and disagreements that render the feminine voice temporarily visible.
The findings suggest that Ghatak’s cinema, though not explicitly feminist, operates within a liminal space where female subjectivity is utilized according to its social constructs.
His women are not merely victims of Partition but become symbolic repositories of collective trauma, cultural continuity, and existential longing.
This paper contributes to Indian feminist film discourse by reassessing Ghatak’s works through a gendered lens, emphasizing the urgency of listening to women’s silences within national and cinematic narratives.

Related Results

Makna Voice Over dalam Pemberitaan Feature di Televisi
Makna Voice Over dalam Pemberitaan Feature di Televisi
Abstract. Voice Over or what is known as VO is being discussed a lot, not only about the profession, but also from the industry side and the various voice over techniques used. Due...
Alternative Entrances: Phillip Noyce and Sydney’s Counterculture
Alternative Entrances: Phillip Noyce and Sydney’s Counterculture
Phillip Noyce is one of Australia’s most prominent film makers—a successful feature film director with both iconic Australian narratives and many a Hollywood blockbuster under his ...
Suspended meanings: Pier Paolo Pasolini’s and Ritwik Ghatak’s ‘epic melodramas’
Suspended meanings: Pier Paolo Pasolini’s and Ritwik Ghatak’s ‘epic melodramas’
Pier Paolo Pasolini’s encounter with India is well known, but India’s engagement with Pasolini’s work is much less considered. This article puts the work of Pasolini in dialogue wi...
Feminist Journalism
Feminist Journalism
Feminists have always used whatever communication and media technologies are available to help them collect and disseminate news about feminism and women’s issues, and to offer the...
Desarrollo de nuevas estructuras laminares de nanocelulosa con propiedades avanzadas para el packaging
Desarrollo de nuevas estructuras laminares de nanocelulosa con propiedades avanzadas para el packaging
(English) Changes in the use of raw materials and major lifestyle changes in first world societies have driven the massive use of petroleum-based materials in a wide range of appli...
Spray Coated Nanocellulose Films Productions, Characterization and Application
Spray Coated Nanocellulose Films Productions, Characterization and Application
Nanocellulose (NC) is a biodegradable, renewable and sustainable material. It has strong potential to use as a functional material in various applications such as barriers, coating...
Speech, communication, and neuroimaging in Parkinson's disease : characterisation and intervention outcomes
Speech, communication, and neuroimaging in Parkinson's disease : characterisation and intervention outcomes
<p dir="ltr">Most individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) experience changes in speech, voice or communication. Speech changes often manifest as hypokinetic dysarthria, a m...
Speech, communication, and neuroimaging in Parkinson's disease : characterisation and intervention outcomes
Speech, communication, and neuroimaging in Parkinson's disease : characterisation and intervention outcomes
<p dir="ltr">Most individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) experience changes in speech, voice or communication. Speech changes often manifest as hypokinetic dysarthria, a m...

Back to Top