cristina de middel

The Perfect Man, 2017

India
1/10


The Perfect Man, 2017

India
2/10


The Perfect Man, 2017

India
3/10


The Perfect Man, 2017

India
4/10


The Perfect Man, 2017

India
5/10


The Perfect Man, 2017

India
6/10


The Perfect Man, 2017

India
7/10


The Perfect Man, 2017

India
8/10


The Perfect Man, 2017

India
9/10


The Perfect Man, 2017

India
10/10


The Perfect Man, 2017



One day, at the age of sixteen, Dr. Ashok Aswani chose to enter a cinema instead of going to work. He watched a Charlie Chaplin film four times in a row and left the theatre convinced that this character could inspire an entirely new generation of Indian men. He lost his job that day, but began what would later become the largest parade in the world dedicated to the Tramp.

Dr. Aswani could not be considered a perfect man. The perfect man works. He contributes to the nation’s progress. He wakes up early, leaves home on time, waves goodbye to his wife from the car, and spends eight hours at the office, navigating daily traffic jams in order to provide for his family. Charlie Chaplin could not be the perfect man either.

In India, the industrial revolution never fully began—and never entirely stopped. Yet a Western model of the “perfect man” was imposed and widely embraced, layered over an already rigid and hierarchical social structure. The result is a deeply ambivalent and often contradictory idea of masculinity.

Using the first ten minutes of Modern Times as a script, this series reflects on India’s particular understanding of masculinity, as well as on the traditional representations of labour, productivity, and the ideal male citizen.

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Books

The Perfect Man



Cristina de Middel examines the peculiar understanding of masculinity in India.

With Chaplin’s film Modern Times as a starting point for the book’s narrative structure, De Middel reflects on the peculiar understanding of masculinity in India, through the relationships between man, machine and work.

In India, the industrial revolution never really started and never really ended, but western standards,which defined this new perfect working man, were imposed and accepted in a society that already had a very elitist cultural structure. The results were confusing.

De Middel tells the story of Doctor Ashok Aswani, who decided one day to go to the cinema instead of going to work. He saw a Chaplin movie four times, lost his job and started what would become the biggest festival homage to Chaplin in the world. Doctor Aswani would never be the perfect man because the perfect man works for his country’s greatness. The perfect man wakes up early to go to work and waves at his wife from the car as he heads towards the daily traffic-jam that would take him to his office. Charlot would never be the perfect man either.

  • Year: 2017
  • Language: English and Spanish
  • Pages:176
  • Dimensions: 28 x 21 cm
  • Publisher: La Fabrica

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