Soft-Soaping India: The World of Indian Televised Soap Operas
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, Indian soap operas are a feature of life — a source of pleasure, discussion and shared identity.

This book characterizes 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 engaged viewers with serializations of the two great epics, the Ramayana and the Mahabarata. 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 Soaping India" is the first book to study Indian televised soap operas in all its forms and will be essential reading for students of the media and sociologists interested in India and its diaspora. It will also be relevant to Women’s Studies.
1111470322
Soft-Soaping India: The World of Indian Televised Soap Operas
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, Indian soap operas are a feature of life — a source of pleasure, discussion and shared identity.

This book characterizes 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 engaged viewers with serializations of the two great epics, the Ramayana and the Mahabarata. 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 Soaping India" is the first book to study Indian televised soap operas in all its forms and will be essential reading for students of the media and sociologists interested in India and its diaspora. It will also be relevant to Women’s Studies.
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Soft-Soaping India: The World of Indian Televised Soap Operas

Soft-Soaping India: The World of Indian Televised Soap Operas

by K. Moti Gokulsing
Soft-Soaping India: The World of Indian Televised Soap Operas

Soft-Soaping India: The World of Indian Televised Soap Operas

by K. Moti Gokulsing

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$32.95 
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Overview

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, Indian soap operas are a feature of life — a source of pleasure, discussion and shared identity.

This book characterizes 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 engaged viewers with serializations of the two great epics, the Ramayana and the Mahabarata. 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 Soaping India" is the first book to study Indian televised soap operas in all its forms and will be essential reading for students of the media and sociologists interested in India and its diaspora. It will also be relevant to Women’s Studies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781858563213
Publisher: Stylus Publishing, LLC
Publication date: 02/23/2004
Pages: 156
Product dimensions: 6.75(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

K. Moti Gokulsing is Senior Visiting Research Fellow at the University of East London. He co-edits the journal South Asian Popular Culture and is the author of the acclaimed Indian Popular Cinema, also published by Trentham.

Date of Birth:

1911

Date of Death:

February 1, 2005

Table of Contents

Acknowledgementsvii
Glossaryviii
List of abbreviationsx
Map of Indiaxi
Introductionxiii
Chapter 1What is an Indian soap opera?1
Chapter 2The development of television in India7
Chapter 3Soap operas telecast on Doordarshan27
Chapter 4Soap operas on satellite television channels59
Chapter 5Theoretical and methodological issues75
Chapter 6The politics of family relationships, birth control and women-oriented soap operas85
Chapter 7The public service ethos and the ideology of consumption95
Chapter 8Indian soaps and society105
Bibliography119
Appendices125
Index131
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