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UID:aa10a05e3fc8377782b46ebc76edab9f
CATEGORIES:Seminars
CREATED:20241008T140335
SUMMARY:Dean Yang - University of Michigan
DESCRIPTION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Ancient Epics in the Television Age
 : Mass Media, Identity, and the Rise of Hindu Nationalism in India</strong>
 ” with Resuf Ahmed, Paul Brimble, Akhila Kovvuri and Alessandro Saia</p><p>
 Abstract:</p><p style="text-align: justify;">This study examines the long-t
 erm social and political impacts of mass media exposure to religious conten
 t in India. We study the impact of “Ramayan” the massively popular adaptati
 on of the Hindu epic televised in 1987-88. To identify causal effects, we c
 on duct difference-in-difference analyses and exploit variation in TV signa
 l strength driven by location of TV transmitters and topographical features
  inhibiting electromagnetic TV signal propagation. We find that areas with 
 higher exposure to Ramayan (higher TV signal strength when the show aired) 
 experienced significant cultural and political changes. First, we document 
 a strengthening of religious identity among Hindus: parents in these areas 
 became more likely to give their newborn sons traditionally Hindu names, an
 d households showed increased adherence to orthodox Hindu dietary practices
 . In the short term, this cultural shift led to an increase in Hindu-Muslim
  communal violence through 1992. Over the longer term, through 2000, the Hi
 ndu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) became more likely to win stat
 e assembly elections. Analyses of changes in local TV signal strength in In
 dia over decades indicate that these effects are not due to general access 
 to TV but are due to exposure to the Ramayan TV show in 1987-1988. Our find
 ings reveal that media portrayal of religious narratives can have lasting e
 ffects on cultural identity, intergroup violence, and electoral outcomes.</
 p>
DTSTAMP:20260418T142213Z
DTSTART:20250313T163000Z
DTEND:20250313T180000Z
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