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The Architecture of Global Mythmaking

How Attenborough’s Gandhi Mastered Soft Power and Why Emerging Cinemas Still Chase Its Shadow The making of Richard Attenborough’s Gandhi (1982) transcends cinematic biography to become a definitive case study in cultural diplomacy, narrative hegemony, and the strategic deployment of soft power. Born from a two-decade artistic obsession and rescued from perpetual development hell through calculated state financing, the film functioned as an outsourced moral broadcast. By leveraging a British director’s historical credibility, Hollywood’s distribution architecture, and India’s partial funding, it codified a universal narrative that Western gatekeepers readily accepted. This article examines the project’s fraught genesis, the financial and logistical symbiosis between Attenborough and the Indian government, and its staggering economic and diplomatic returns. It further explores how Gandhi achieved a global narrative monopoly, marginalizing counter-perspectives like Pakistan’s Jinnah (...

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