This study explores the Indianization of Shakespearean tragedy in contemporary Hindi cinema, focusing on the celebrated adaptations by director Vishal Bhardwaj—Maqbool (2003), Omkara (2006), and Haider (2014). By recontextualizing Shakespeare’s classics (Macbeth, Othello, and Hamlet) within Indian socio-cultural and political milieus, Bhardwaj not only reinterprets canonical narratives but also foregrounds enduring human values such as ambition, jealousy, loyalty, morality, and justice within distinctly Indian contexts. The films are not merely cinematic transliterations; they are cultural translations that negotiate universal themes through Indian experiential frameworks, embedding Shakespearean ethics within questions of power, caste, honour, and conflict. Maqbool translates Macbeth into the underworld politics of Mumbai, exploring ambition and culpability against a backdrop of syndicate crime. Omkara relocates Othello to the caste-fractured political landscape of rural Uttar Pradesh, interrogating trust, betrayal, and honour as lived social values. Haider places Hamlet in the contested terrain of Kashmir, extending the play’s existential and ethical dilemmas to questions of political violence, disappearance, and familial loyalty. Through these adaptations, Shakespeare’s moral concerns are not diluted; instead they acquire new resonance in Indian socio-political realities, demonstrating that human values can be culturally specific yet universally recognizable. This paper argues that Bhardwaj’s films not only retain Shakespeare’s thematic depth but also reframe it through Indian cultural logics, thus contributing to a transnational Shakespearean praxis. By analyzing narrative structures, character development, and thematic reconfigurations, this study situates Bhardwaj’s trilogy within adaptation theory and cultural studies, emphasizing the dialectic between global literature and local cinema. Ultimately, these films exemplify how Shakespeare’s insights into human nature continue to be meaningful across cultures when thoughtfully reimagined rather than merely reproduced
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Dr. Vikram Shivram Dhanve
Sanskriti Samvardhan Mandal
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Dr. Vikram Shivram Dhanve (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a1353eed1d949a99abef10 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18775860