Sri Lankan civil war in popular culture
Appearance
(Redirected from Sri Lankan Civil War in popular culture)
With the Sri Lankan Civil War spanning for nearly 30 years (1983–2009), the conflict has been portrayed in a variety of ways in popular culture, both during the war and after its conclusion.
Literature
[edit]Biographies
[edit]- Tamil Tigress (2011), by Niromi de Soyza
Non-fiction
[edit]- This Divided Island (2015), by Samanth Subramanian
- Island of Blood (2003), by Anita Pratap
- The Tamil Genocide by Sri Lanka (2009), by Francis Boyle
- The Cage (2011), by Gordon Weiss
- Still Counting the Dead (2012), by Frances Harrison
- Gota’s War: The Crushing of Tamil Tiger Terrorism in Sri Lanka (2012), by C. A. Chandraprema
- Dare to Dream - Heroic Tales for the Tamil Diaspora (2012), by J. K. Sivalingam
- A Fleeting Moment in My Country (2012), by N. Malathy
Novels
[edit]- Tech War (Able Team) (1985), by Dick Stivers
- Funny Boy (1994), by Shyam Selvadurai
- The Road from Elephant Pass (2003), by Nihal De Silva
- Island of a Thousand Mirrors (2012), by Nayomi Munaweera
- Ummath (2014), by Sharmila Seyyid
- The Story of a Brief Marriage (2016), by Anuk Arudpragasam
Film & TV
[edit]Films
[edit]- Unakkaga Piranthen (1992), directed by Balu Anand
- Purahanda Kaluwara (1997), directed by Prasanna Vithanage
- Saroja (2000), directed by Somaratne Dissanayake
- In the Name of Buddha (2002), directed by Rajesh Touchriver
- Kannathil Muthamittal (2002), directed by Mani Ratnam
- Ira Madiyama (2003), directed by Prasanna Vithanage
- Aanivaer (2006), directed by John Mahendran
- Kuttrapathirikai (2007), directed by R. K. Selvamani
- Prabhakaran (2008), directed by Thushara Peiris
- The Road from Elephant Pass (2008), directed by Chandran Rutnam
- Flying Fish (2011), directed by Sanjeewa Pushpakumara
- Matha (2011), directed by Boodee Keerthisena
- A Common Man (2013), directed by Chandran Rutnam
- Madras Cafe (2013), directed by John Abraham
- Ceylon (2013), directed by Santosh Sivan
- A Private War (2018), directed by Matthew Heineman
Documentaries
[edit]- Crayons and Paper (2009), directed by Bruce David Janu
- Sri Lanka's Killing Fields (2011), directed by Callum Macrae
- Lies Agreed Upon (2011), by the Sri Lankan Ministry of Defence
- Sri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished (2012), directed by Callum Macrae
- Ruthless (2012), by the Sri Lankan Ministry of Defence
- No Fire Zone (2013), directed by Callum Macrae
- Sri Lanka's Unfinished War (2013), by the BBC
Animation
[edit]- Mobile Suit Gundam 00 (2007), by Sunrise, Inc.[1]
Music
[edit]- Poradada Oru Valenthada, song from Alai Osai (1985)
- Tholvi Nilaiyena, song from Oomai Vizhigal (1986)[2]
- Lions and Tigers (1997), song by Brown Boogie Nation
- Sebalanani (2009), song by Ranidu Lankage
- Born Free (2010), song by M.I.A.
Video games
[edit]- Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Predator (2010)
- NERO: The Sniper (2021)
References
[edit]- ^ "「機動戦士ガンダム00」ストーリーガイド【第2回】 第2話「ガンダムマイスター」(DVD第1巻収録)を紹介!". GUNDAM.INFO. Bandai Namco Filmworks Inc.
- ^ "Tholvi Nilayena (Oomai Vizhigal)". Tamil Guardian. April 29, 2011.