Widowhood in Indian cinema has often been shown through societal rules, rituals, or moral judgement, while the emotional and psychological experiences of widowed women remain inconspicuous. This study explores how Kannada cinema symbolises widowhood as a form of psychological trauma shaped by silence and emotional restraint. This paper engages in a comparative analysis of Ghatashraddha and Nathicharami, and explores how grief, isolation, and inner conflict are communicated without dramatic dialogue or spectacle. Using Trauma and Affect Theory, through detailed analysis of the film text, this paper explores how signs of trauma emerge subtly in daily practices and habitual gestures. Ghatashraddha presents widowhood as a condition enforced by rigid social and religious practices, where the community dictates and suppresses a woman’s grief. Nathicharami, set in a contemporary urban context, portrays widowhood as an internal struggle, where emotional pain is privately endured despite apparent social progress. In both films, silence evolves as a powerful cinematic tool which defies clear expression and agency. The paper argues that these films experience grief emotionally rather than viewing it from the sidelines. By avoiding melodrama and focusing on mood, stillness, and daily life, Kannada cinema offers a sensitive way of representing women’s mental health. This paper offers critical reading by showing how cinema can humanize psychological trauma through quiet and compassionate storytelling.
Balagam et al. (Sat,) studied this question.