Event



Lecture | Moinak Biswas

Feb 4, 2020 @

Slought | 4017 Walnut Street

Temple Film and Media Arts and Penn Cinema and Media Studies announce Punctuations, a lecture by scholar and filmmaker Moinak Biswas about form and history in the work of the Indian avant-garde filmmaker Ritwik Ghatak, on Tuesday, February 4, 2020 from 5:30-7pm. This event is free and open to the public, and has been organized in partnership with Slought.

The Indian filmmaker Ritwik Ghatak (1925-76) set out to create a cinema that could speak to a predicament that continues to this day – the loss of home and homeland. The partition of India in 1947 formed the immediate backdrop; but he was looking for means to develop its experience into a general symptom of homelessness. He tried to work out a form that could capture the unfolding of ordinary lives in the wake of 1947, and also figure the epochal resonance of that process.

Biswas, will look closely at Ghatak's film Subarnarekha (The Golden Line, 1962) and its logic of narrative transition. Ghatak drew from English Chronicle plays in structuring the film. The abundance of coincidences, which alienated his already unsympathetic critics, is itself treated as a theme in the film. As it tells the story of a refugee family moving into new settlements Subarnarekha adopts a seemingly simple technique of indicating the passage of time, but these transitions appear to be making secret connections across time and consciousness.

Post lecture, Biswas will be in conversation with Nora Alter, Professor, Temple, School of Theater, Film and Media Arts.

Moinak Biswas is Professor of Film Studies at Jadavpur University, Calcutta. He is also the initiator of the Media Lab, a centre for experiments in digital forms, at Jadavpur. Among his publications are Apu and After, Revisiting Ray's Cinema (2005), and Ujan gang baiya (1990, 2018). He edits the Journal of the Moving Image and was one of the founding editors of BioScope, South Asian Screen Studies. He has written and co-directed the award-winning Bengali feature film Sthaniya Sambaad (2010), and has recently created the video installation Across the Burning Track, commissioned for the 11th Shanghai Biennale, 2016.