Soft-soaping India : the world of Indian televised soap operas

Bibliographic Information

Soft-soaping India : the world of Indian televised soap operas

K. Moti Gokulsing

Trentham Books, 2004

Other Title

World of Indian televised soap operas

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 119-124) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

At least one third of India's billion inhabitants regularly watch Indian soap operas, which have displaced popular cinema as the prime entertainment genre. And in the Indian diaspora on every Continent too, Indian soap operas are a feature of life - a source of pleasure, discussion and shared identity. This book characterises the forms of these soap operas and relates how they have evolved. It explores how they have contributed to shaping the identity of modern India. Initially developed by the national telecast service, Doordoshan, specifically to convey messages about women's role, contraception and other family issues, Doordoshan also captivated viewers with serialisations of the two great epics, the Ramayana and the Mohabarata. But with the onset of cable TV, soap operas became primarily entertainment driven and progressively more sensational. The book traces the impact of these different strands of soap operas and considers their impact on India's dominant concerns: the search for national unity, identity, the changing role of women, and the ideology of consumerism. Soft-Sooping India is the first book to study Indian televised soap operas in all its forms and will be essentia

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