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Cut-Pieces

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Imagine watching an action film in a small-town cinema hall in Bangladesh, and in between the gun battles and fistfights a short pornographic clip appears. This is known as a cut-piece, a strip of ...
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  • 19 November 2013
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Imagine watching an action film in a small-town cinema hall in Bangladesh, and in between the gun battles and fistfights a short pornographic clip appears. This is known as a cut-piece, a strip of locally made celluloid pornography surreptitiously spliced into the reels of action films in Bangladesh. Exploring the shadowy world of these clips and their place in South Asian film culture, Lotte Hoek builds a rare, detailed portrait of the production, consumption, and cinematic pleasures of stray celluloid.

Hoek's innovative ethnography plots the making and reception of Mintu the Murderer (2005, pseud.), a popular, Bangladeshi B-quality action movie and fascinating embodiment of the cut-piece phenomenon. She begins with the early scriptwriting phase and concludes with multiple screenings in remote Bangladeshi cinema halls, following the cut-pieces as they appear and disappear from the film, destabilizing its form, generating controversy, and titillating audiences. Hoek's work shines an unusual light on Bangladesh's state-owned film industry and popular practices of the obscene. She also reframes conceptual approaches to South Asian cinema and film culture, drawing on media anthropology to decode the cultural contradictions of Bangladesh since the 1990s.

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Price: $140.00
Pages: 272
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: South Asia Across the Disciplines
Publication Date: 19 November 2013
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231162883
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Pornography, ART / Asian / General
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Hoek's journeys to towns with considerable distance from Dhaka are a thrill to read; viewings of Mintu the Murderer are vivid in no small terms, and the local color of hanging out at tea stalls and backrooms were page-turners. This is an inspired book, showing the life of a film from its conception to exhibition, or in this case to its ban.
Lotte Hoek is a lecturer in social anthropology at the University of Edinburgh. She received her Ph.D. from the Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research, and her research focuses on visual culture and the anthropology of media.

Note on Transliteration, Translation, and Pseudonyms
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Before Mintu the Murderer
1. Writing Gaps : The Script of Mintu the Murderer
2. A Handheld Camera Twisted Rapidly: The Technology of Mintu the Murderer
3. Actress /Character: The Heroines of Mintu the Murderer
4. Cutting and Splicing: The Editor and Censor of Mintu the Murderer
5. Noise: The Public Sphere of Mintu the Murderer
6. Unstable Celluloid: The Exhibiti on of Mintu the Murderer
Conclusion: After Mintu the Murderer
Notes
Bibliography
Index