Interweaving Dystopian and Utopian Spaces, Constructing Social Realism on Screen: Bakita Byaktigato/The Rest is Personal

IF 0.3 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Open Library of Humanities Pub Date : 2019-02-08 DOI:10.16995/OLH.410
Sanghita Sen
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This article investigates the role of utopian and dystopian spaces in the construction of social realism in Bakita Byaktigato/The Rest is Personal (Pradipta Bhattacharya, 2013). The inherent contradiction between the implausible fictional construct of utopian and dystopian spaces and the existing socio-political reality is finely foregrounded through multiple loci of narrative actions. The film, based in Kolkata, revolves around Pramit, an aspiring documentary film-maker, and his quest for love. There are two spaces in the depiction of Kolkata: the city that contains the contemporary socio-political reality which is neither utopic or dystopic, and its dystopic underbelly that embodies the absence of hope for redemption or respite for its inhabitants. Pramit meets a fraudulent astrologer who occupies the dystopian space of ‘darkened shadows’ but knows about the utopian space that remains beyond his reach. The dystopian space is riddled with poverty, deprivation, unfulfilled desire, and hopelessness, along with fear and volatility. The final locus is a village called Mohini, a utopian space representing absolute harmony and undiluted bliss. Only the chosen ones have the privilege to enter the village. Everyone is happy in this space and prone to falling in love that lasts a lifetime. This is commemorative of arshinagar (‘the mirror city’), a coveted space in baul practices and a metaphor for a utopian space that stands in stark contrast with the reality. By interweaving these spaces in his cinematic experimentation, Bhattacharya addresses issues such as folk-cultural practices and community, economic crises and class, caste hierarchy, and social relationships, while attempting to create an alternative cinematic language to counter the filmmaking practices in Bengal that rendered itself vestigial.
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将反乌托邦和乌托邦空间交织在一起,在屏幕上构建社会现实主义:巴基塔·拜克蒂加托/其余的都是个人的
本文探讨了《其余的是个人的》(Pradipta Bhattacharya, 2013)中乌托邦和反乌托邦空间在社会现实主义建构中的作用。乌托邦和反乌托邦空间的难以置信的虚构结构与现存的社会政治现实之间的内在矛盾,通过多个叙事行动的轨迹被精细地呈现出来。这部以加尔各答为背景的电影围绕着一位有抱负的纪录片制片人普拉米特和他对爱情的追求展开。在对加尔各答的描述中有两个空间:包含当代社会政治现实的城市,既不是乌托邦也不是反乌托邦,而其反乌托邦的弱点体现了对其居民缺乏救赎或喘息的希望。普拉米特遇到了一个欺诈占星家,他占据了“黑暗阴影”的反乌托邦空间,但他知道乌托邦空间仍然超出了他的范围。反乌托邦的空间充斥着贫穷、剥夺、未实现的欲望和绝望,以及恐惧和动荡。最后一个地点是一个名为Mohini的村庄,这是一个乌托邦式的空间,代表着绝对的和谐和纯粹的幸福。只有被选中的人才有特权进入村庄。在这个空间里,每个人都很开心,而且很容易坠入一生一世的爱情。这是对arshinagar(“镜子之城”)的纪念,这是一个令人垂涎的空间,也是一个乌托邦空间的隐喻,与现实形成鲜明对比。通过在他的电影实验中交织这些空间,巴塔查里亚解决了诸如民间文化习俗和社区,经济危机和阶级,种姓制度和社会关系等问题,同时试图创造一种替代的电影语言来对抗孟加拉的电影制作实践,使自己变得退化。
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来源期刊
Open Library of Humanities
Open Library of Humanities HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
20.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: The Open Library of Humanities is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal open to submissions from researchers working in any humanities'' discipline in any language. The journal is funded by an international library consortium and has no charges to authors or readers. The Open Library of Humanities is digitally preserved in the CLOCKSS archive.
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