Győri, ZsoltTörök, Lívia2013-01-212013-01-212012-04-162013-01-21http://hdl.handle.net/2437/156448My thesis concentrates on the cinematic representation of the encounter and coexistence between East and West. I hope to analyse the nature of this encounter and coexistence – let it be considered either a salad bowl or as a melting pot – with the help of nine films made between 1985 and 2010. Obviously there are a great deal of many more films which address the issues of conformity and resistance of Islam and Sikh culture in Britain. The funniest one, It’s a Wondeful Afterlife, is not on this list because it represents a utopian view of multiculturalism. In this film the multicultural context is played down and comic elements in the tradition of classic Ealing films become overvalued. I have decided not to include TV films, like Bradford Riots, nor will I discuss films by English-Indian directors set exclusively outside Britain. Bride and Prejudice by Gurinder Chandra would belong to this category.44engenerationculturegendersexualityThe Representation of Multiculturalism in Contemporary British CinemadiplomamunkaThe South Asian DiasporaDEENK Témalista::Társadalomtudományok::Kultúrális antropológiaip