How Mira Nair’s filmmaking shaped Zohran Mamdani’s narrative vision
The Artist’s Son Becomes a Political Leader
While most attention has focused on Zohran Mamdani’s father–the renowned postcolonial scholar–equal attention deserves his mother, Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Mira Nair, whose artistic practices deeply shaped how her son understands politics, identity, and narrative. Mira Nair, a 68-year-old artist whose films including “Salaam Bombay” and “Mississippi Masala” have been nominated for Academy Awards, explore themes of race, homelessness, and cultural identity. Her films insist that marginalized people possess agency, intelligence, and dignity that dominant cinema refuses to recognize. This aesthetic commitment to centering marginalized voices directly parallels Zohran’s political commitment to centering working-class New Yorkers’ experiences and agency.