- Title
- Bollywood vamps and vixens: representations of the negative women characters in Bollywood films
- Creator
- Kishore, Vikrant
- Relation
- Transgressive Womanhood: Invesigating Vamps, Witches, Whores, Serial Killers and Monsters p. 139-149
- Relation
- https://www.interdisciplinarypress.net/online-store/ebooks/evil-monsters-horror/transgressive-womanhood
- Publisher
- Inter-Disciplinary Press
- Resource Type
- book chapter
- Date
- 2014
- Description
- When it comes to the representation of women, Bollywood/Hindi Cinema has followed certain stereotypical norms in most of the films; woman as mother, lover, spouse, sister or woman as vamp, prostitute, cabaret dancer. Bollywood cinema has exploited the vamp's character in almost every film, characterizing them as mean, seductive, coquette and vixenish, characterless and promiscuous. Since the lead actress in the early Bollywood cinema were mainly shown as a virtuous and morally upright person, the vamp characters fulfilled the requirement of the eroticized, fetishized and sexualized imagery for the male gaze. In Bollywood cinema, the vamps are mainly depicted as cabaret dancers, courtesans, prostitutes and girlfriends of the villains. The depiction of the vamps in Hindi cinema has followed the archetype that was set in the 1930s and 1940s and continued until the late 1990s, Actors such as Helen, Bindu, Aruna Irani, Kalpana Iyer and Shashikala became notoriously popular playing vamps during 1960-80s portraying an image of uninhibited, feral and licentious and predominantly having a westernized outlook. In this chapter, I will examine the representation of the negative women characters in Bollywood films of the 21st century and explore if their representation has changed in any way from that of the films of pre-2000s. I will examine how Bollywood films represent the duality of good and evil, virtuous and wicked. I will also analyse how the Bollywood vamp figure has been used to exploit eroticism, especially through the song and dance sequences. To conclude, I will discuss how in the 2000s the women characters in Bollywood cinema are no more represented in terms of black and white, but has moved into the grey zone, where the role of the lead actress can be actively interpreted as the merger of the classic heroine and vamp characters.
- Subject
- film; film theory and criticism; Bollywood films; female representations; femme fatale; misogyny; sexuality
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1065474
- Identifier
- uon:17852
- Identifier
- ISBN:9781848882836
- Language
- eng
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