Lost spectacle: Media consumption by Kashmiri youth in the absence of cinema halls

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Gowhar Farooq
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Hardline militants forced the cinema halls in Kashmir into closure in 1989. As heavy militarization ensued, several spaces, including cinema halls, were transformed into structures where people, especially young men, were detained and tortured by soldiers and militia. The generations born after the 1980s, therefore, grew up in a cinema-less, militarized world. In the absence of functional cinema halls, they, for years, relied on the state broadcaster for movies and media. Later – although under tremendous threat from extremists – a network of local cable TV operators, who functioned without licences, provided some succour. They were followed by pirate video-cassette and compact-disk parlours that provided people with a means to stay connected to movie culture. And, while the scene changed with the arrival of satellite TV, computers and later the internet, which connected the youth of the region to the larger global media culture, the absence of cinema persists. This article aims to explore how youth, born after the 1980s, associate with cinema halls of Kashmir and what the loss of the cinema viewing culture means to them. To this end, I intend to look into cinema culture before the 1990s and the politics around the closure of cinema halls. The article will also put into perspective the arrival of satellite TV and the circulation of pirated video cassettes, compact disks and videos of the funerals of rebels that were filmed and circulated by rental shops. These practices and processes, which shaped the childhood and youth of several generations in Kashmir, offer insights into the media consumption and the role the state and its apparatuses have in shaping the youth in a conflict-ridden and militarized region of the Global South.
失落的奇观:克什米尔青年在没有电影院的情况下的媒体消费
1989年,强硬派武装分子迫使克什米尔的电影院关闭。随着严重的军事化,包括电影院在内的几个空间被改造成人们,特别是年轻人被士兵和民兵拘留和折磨的地方。因此,上世纪80年代以后出生的人成长在一个没有电影的军事化世界。由于缺乏功能齐全的电影院,他们多年来一直依赖国家广播公司播放电影和媒体。后来——尽管受到极端分子的巨大威胁——一个没有牌照的地方有线电视运营商网络提供了一些援助。紧随其后的是盗版录像带和光盘店,它们为人们提供了与电影文化保持联系的途径。随着卫星电视、电脑和后来的互联网的出现,情况发生了变化,互联网将该地区的年轻人与更大的全球媒体文化联系起来,但电影的缺失仍然存在。本文旨在探讨80后的年轻人如何与克什米尔的电影院联系在一起,以及电影观影文化的丧失对他们意味着什么。为此,我打算研究90年代以前的电影文化和围绕电影院关闭的政治。这篇文章还将对卫星电视的到来和盗版录像带、光盘以及由租赁店拍摄和传播的叛军葬礼视频的流通进行透视。这些做法和过程塑造了克什米尔几代人的童年和青年时代,为我们提供了洞察媒体消费以及国家及其机器在塑造全球南方这个充满冲突和军事化地区的年轻人方面所起的作用的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Studies in South Asian Film and Media
Studies in South Asian Film and Media Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
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