- Source: Pratibha Parmar
Pratibha Parmar is a British writer and filmmaker. She has made feminist documentaries such as Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth (2014) and My Name is Andrea (2022) about Andrea Dworkin.
Early life
Parmar was born in Nairobi, Kenya, to Indian parents and when she was 12 her family moved to the United Kingdom. She received a B.A. degree from Bradford University and attended Birmingham University for postgraduate studies. Parmar's feminism was influenced by writers such as Angela Davis, June Jordan, Cherrie Moraga, Barbara Smith and Alice Walker.
Career
With her 1991 film Khush, Parmar examined the erotic world of South Asian lesbians and gay men in the United Kingdom and India, using a mix of documentary footage and dramatic scenes.
The documentary Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth (2014) is about the life of author and activist Alice Walker, whom Parmar had first met in 1991 via June Jordan and Angela Davis. Walker and Parmar also collaborated on Warrior Marks, a documentary about female genital mutilation. They then released a book, also entitled Warrior Marks (1993).
In 2022, Parmar released her documentary My Name is Andrea about the second-wave feminist and writer Andrea Dworkin.
Parmar has also made music videos for Morcheeba, Tori Amos and Midge Ure.
Awards and recognition
Parmar won the 1993 Frameline Award at the Frameline Film Festival in San Francisco and her films have won various prizes. In 2016, she was listed as one of BBC's 100 Women.
Selected works
= Film
=Khush (1991)
A Place of Rage (1991)
Nina's Heavenly Delights (2006)
Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth (2014)
My Name is Andrea (2022)
= Writing
=Pocket Sized Venus in Femmes of Power: Exploding Queer Femininities, Del LaGrace Volcano and Ulrika Dahl. Serpent's Tail, 2008.
Warrior Marks: Female Genital Mutilation and the Sexual Blinding of Women. Co-author with Alice Walker. Harcourt Brace in the U.S. and Jonathan Cape in the U.K, November 1993.
Queer Looks: An Anthology of Writings about Lesbian and Gay Media. Co-edited with Martha Gever & John Greyson. Routledge, New York & London, October 1993.
"Perverse Politics", in Feminist Review, No 34, 1991.
"Challenging Imperial Feminism with Valerie Amos", in Feminist Review (1984) and reprinted several times in various publications and anthologies including Feminism & Race. Oxford University Press, 2000.
See also
List of female film and television directors
List of lesbian filmmakers
List of LGBT-related films directed by women
References
Further reading
Tyrkus, Michael (1997). Gay & Lesbian Biography. Detroit: St. James Press. pp. 355–357. ISBN 9781558622371. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
Gwendolyn Audrey Foster, Women Filmmakers of the African and Asian Diaspora. Southern Illinois University Press, 1997.
Looking For The Other. Feminism, Film and the Imperial Gaze. Chapter 6: "Can One Know the Other?” The Ambivalence of Postcolonialism in Chocolat, Warrior Marks, and Mississippi Masala." E. Ann Kaplan. Routledge, 1997.
Alpana Sharma Knippling, "Self (En)Gendered in Ideology: Pratibha Parmar's Bhangra Jig and Sari Red", in JPCS: Journal for the Psychoanalysis of Culture & Society, Volume 1 (No 2), Fall 1996.
Film Fatales: Independent Women Directors. Eds. Judith M. Redding & Victoria A. Brownworth. Seal Press, 1997.
External links
Pratibha Parmar website
Pratibha Parmar at IMDb
Pratibha Parmar at Women Make Movies
Marjorie Baumgarten, "Two by Pratibha Parmar: A Place of Rage, Khush" (review), The Austin Chronicle, 21 February 1992.
Louise Carolin, "INTERVIEW/VIDEO: PRATIBHA PARMAR ON HER FILM ABOUT AMERICAN ICON ALICE WALKER", Diva, 19 March 2012.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Mira Nair
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- Gopi (seri televisi)
- Naagin (seri televisi 2015)
- Pratibha Parmar
- Pratibha
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- Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth
- Nina's Heavenly Delights
- A Place of Rage
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- Khush (film)