Abstract:
Looking at the re-efflorescence of what may be called red f ilms—fi lms that
thematize and celebrate the spirit of communism— and the visible presence of
Left- leaning fi lm makers in the Malayalam film industry, in this paper I argue how
popular cinema has emerged as a key site in the reconstruction of a Malayali
national-popular. Despite the apparent distrust the Left in Kerala shows towards
popular cinema, the domain of the popular has played a significant role in the
construction of a national-popular centred on the linguistic identity in Kerala.
While Marxism shares a historical affinity with popular forms such as romance,
opera, melodrama, etc., the Left in Kerala shows a renewed interest in the field of
culture as a result of the rise of Hindu nationalism in the country which conf lates
culture with religion. Apart from the “cultural interventions” of the right-wing, the
Left also faces serious challenges from the part of various social movements
centred on the question of caste, gender and religious identities. The rise of social
movements in the 1990s “brought to the fore the questions of caste and gender
that were submerged under the earlier socio-cultural consensus generated by the
hegemonic Malayali national popular shaped by the communists” (Devika 2013).