Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration, Quotation, Names, and Transcripts
Introduction: Ontological Politics of the Image
Introduction
From Ontologies to Ontological Politics
Toward a Linguistic Anthropology of Cinema
A Brief History of Tamil Cinema
For a “Tamil” Cinema
Realism and the Mass Hero
Overview of the Chapters
Part I: Presence/Representation
1. The Hero’s Mass
Introduction
Presence of the Film Image
Gravity of the Hero’s Mass
Presence of Mass
Image-Act of the Slaps
Sociological Realism of the Mass Hero’s Image
Aesthetic Realism and the Event of the Slaps
Ambivalent Realisms
Authorizing the Slaps, or the Principal of Animation
Conclusion
2. The Heroine’s Stigma
Introduction
Item’s Interruption
Item’s Titillation
Item’s Spectacle
Ontological Politics of Sexual Difference
Actness of the Image
Politics of Vision
Explicitness of Performativity
Voyeurism and Exhibitionism in 7/G Rainbow Colony
Kinship Chronotopes and Sociological Traces of the Performativity of Presence
Marriage and Not-to-be-looked-at-ness
An Alien Presence
Conclusion
Epilogue
Part II: Representation/Presence
3. The Politics of Parody
Introduction
Anti-Cine-Politics of Thamizh Padam
A Politics of (Im/possible) Worlds
Chronopolitics
For Another Kind of Image
For a Less Serious Industry
A Politics of Production
The Politics for an Image
Conclusion
4. The Politics of the Real
Introduction
Questions of Realism
Register of Realism
Enregistering Realism in Tamil Cinema
Kaadhal (“Love”)
Realism’s Heroism
This Is a True Story
Representing Taboo
Caste and Sexuality in Kaadhal
Frustrated Textuality and Sexual Reference
Production Format of Realism
New Faces and the Director’s Image
Realism’s Illiberal Extimacy and the Suspension of Belief
Conclusion
Conclusions
An End of an Era
Killing the Mass Hero
Performativity
Representation and the Method
Theory of a Linguistic Anthropology of Cinema
For a Linguistic Anthropology of …
Notes
Interviews and Works Cited
Index