<p><br /><em>The Films of Mira Nair: Diaspora V</em><em>&eacute;rit&eacute;</em><em> </em>presents the first full-length scholarly study of her cinema. Mira Nair has broken new ground as both a feminist filmmaker and an Indian filmmaker. Several of her works especially those related to the South Asian diaspora have been influential around the globe.<br /><br />Amardeep Singh delves into the complexities of Nair&#39;s films from 1981 to 2016 offering critical commentary on all of Nair&#39;s major works including her early documentary projects as well as shorts. The subtitle &quot;diaspora v&eacute;rit&eacute;&quot; alludes to Singh&#39;s primary theme: Nair&#39;s filmmaking project is driven aesthetically by her background in the documentary realist tradition (cin&eacute;ma v&eacute;rit&eacute;) and thematically by her interest in the lives of migrants and diasporic populations. Mainly Nair&#39;s filmmaking intends to document imaginatively the experiences of diasporic communities.<br /><br />Nair&#39;s focus on the diasporic appears in the long list of her films that have explored the subject such as <em>Mississippi Masala</em> <em>So Far from India</em> <em>Monsoon Wedding</em> <em>The Perez Family</em> <em> My Own Country</em> <em> The Namesake</em> and <em>The Reluctant Fundamentalist</em>. However a version of the diasporic sensibility also emerges even in films with an apparently different scope such as Nair&#39;s adaptation of Thackeray&#39;s <em>Vanity Fair.</em><br /><br />Nair began her career as a documentary filmmaker in the early 1980s. While Nair now has largely moved away from the documentary format in favor of making fictional feature films Singh shows<em> </em>that a documentary realist style remains active in her subsequent fictional cinema.</p>
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