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This article examines the aesthetic, political, and historical significance of material objects in Satyajit Ray’s Shatranj Ke Khilari (1977), while exploring how the film translates Munshi Premchand’s short story into a cinematic meditation on decadence, dependency, and colonial subjugation. By employing the frameworks of Kracauer, Bazin, and Balázs, the essay situates Ray’s visual strategies within the discourse of material aesthetics, where objects, textures, and spatial arrangements acquire expressive and ideological resonance. The study analyzes carefully curated inanimate objects as mnemonic devices through which Ray reconstructs the historical memory of Awadh’s annexation (1856). Furthermore, through a close reading of the quotidian lives of Awadh’s ruler, King Wajid Ali Shah, and his noblemen, Nawab Mirza Sajjad Ali and Nawab Mir Roshan Ali in the film, the article investigates how Ray’s film becomes a subtle commentary on their colonial defeat and cultural dispossession. Additionally, by evaluating the film’s historical authenticity and character dynamics, the article highlights Ray’s distinctive approach and demonstrates the potential of visual media to enhance our comprehension of historical narratives through the interplay of aesthetics and cultural memory.
Devshree Bhargava (Mon,) studied this question.
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