Dark Humour and the Female Performance of Subversion in South-Asian Diasporic Cinema: Chadha’s Rich Deceiver, It’s A Wonderful Afterlife, and What Do You Call An Indian Woman Who’s Funny?

Bhattacharjee, Shuhita (2022) Dark Humour and the Female Performance of Subversion in South-Asian Diasporic Cinema: Chadha’s Rich Deceiver, It’s A Wonderful Afterlife, and What Do You Call An Indian Woman Who’s Funny? South Asian Studies, 38 (1). pp. 40-55. ISSN 0266-6030

Full text not available from this repository. (Request a copy)

Abstract

This essay focuses on three films from Gurinder Chadha’s South-Asian diasporic oeuvre, Rich Deceiver (1995), It’s A Wonderful Afterlife (2010), and the documentary titled What Do You Call An Indian Woman Who’s Funny? (1994), in order to understand the brand of humour that is theorized and staged from the filmmaker’s diasporic context of hybridity and liminality. I will argue that the female characters in the first two films produce dark humour from a position of marginality–-gendered and class-based in the case of Ellie Freeman (Rich Deceiver), gendered and racialized (diasporic) in the case of Mrs. Sethi (It’s A Wonderful Afterlife)–which in turn allows these characters agency and control in a public space where humour is generally assumed to be the exclusive preserve of masculine authority. I will argue that the very figure of a woman performing/producing dark humour–especially in a racially-inflected diasporic context such as Chadha’s own–functions as a vehicle for the critique of normative social oppression, whether gender-, class-, or race-based, and therefore becomes an inherently empowering template and expository medium both for the female characters and for the genre of South Asian diasporic cinema. © 2022 The British Association for South Asian Studies.

[error in script]
IITH Creators:
IITH CreatorsORCiD
Bhattacharjee, Shuhitahttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9289-3157
Item Type: Article
Additional Information: I would like to acknowledge the support of the British Film Institute (London) for providing me viewing access to their copy of Gurinder Chadha’s Rich Deceiver, which was unavailable at all other archives across the globe, as well as her rare documentary, What Do You Call An Indian Woman Who's Funny?.
Uncontrolled Keywords: dark humour; gendered performance; Gurinder Chadha; humour from below; postcolonial cultural critique; South Asian diasporic cinema
Subjects: Arts > Liberal arts
Divisions: Department of Liberal Arts
Depositing User: . LibTrainee 2021
Date Deposited: 25 Jul 2022 08:36
Last Modified: 15 Sep 2022 10:54
URI: http://raiith.iith.ac.in/id/eprint/9908
Publisher URL: http://doi.org/10.1080/02666030.2022.2035085
OA policy: https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/6098
Related URLs:

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item
Statistics for RAIITH ePrint 9908 Statistics for this ePrint Item