Published Date: 04-11-2025 Issue: Vol. 2 No. 11 (2025): November 2025 Published Paper PDF: Download
Abstract: The representation of women in Indian cinema has undergone significant transformation across decades, reflecting broader socio-cultural shifts, evolving audience expectations, and the emergence of new media platforms. Early Indian films largely depicted women within restrictive frameworks—dutiful daughters, sacrificial mothers, or devoted wives—mirroring patriarchal norms that dominated both society and cinematic narratives. As India progressed through economic liberalisation, urbanisation, and increased global exposure, cinematic portrayals began to diversify, gradually embracing women as independent professionals, protagonists with agency, or individuals negotiating complex social realities. However, this transformation remained uneven, with mainstream cinema often oscillating between progressive intent and stereotypical regression. The advent of digital streaming platforms such as Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Disney+ Hotstar marked a decisive shift in creative freedom, narrative experimentation, and audience accessibility. Streaming originals have significantly disrupted traditional filmmaking conventions by providing space for bold, nuanced, and multi-layered female characters. Unlike commercial cinema bound by box-office pressures, streaming narratives explore themes of identity, sexuality, ambition, trauma, and social justice with greater authenticity. This study critically examines the transformation of female portrayals from traditional Indian cinema to contemporary streaming originals, analysing narrative patterns, character arcs, thematic concerns, and socio-cultural implications. Drawing upon qualitative content analysis, secondary literature, and sample quantitative trends, the paper highlights how streaming media has democratized representation, enabling the emergence of women as central agents rather than peripheral figures. The research also investigates the interplay between cultural norms, censorship structures, industry economics, and technological change in shaping these portrayals. The findings demonstrate a marked increase in progressive, empowered, and realistic depictions of women in recent years, although challenges related to objectification, tokenism, and commercial commodification persist. The study concludes that Indian cinema is in a transitional phase where traditional and contemporary representations coexist, but digital platforms have accelerated the move toward more empowered, authentic, and diverse depictions of women. This transition holds critical implications for gender discourse, audience perception, and the future of Indian media.
Keywords: Gender Representation, Indian Cinema, Streaming Platforms, Female Portrayals, Digital Media, Narrative Transformation, Content Analysis.