Film History and Screen Culture in and beyond Greater China
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:28th Feb '25
£145.00
This title is due to be published on 28th February, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£39.99(9781032458151)
Bringing together work from established and emerging scholars and practitioners from around the world, this collection expands existing scholarship on cinemas of the Sinosphere by revealing forgotten and emerging aspects of film history.
Organised chronologically, individual chapters cover geographic regions of mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan to engage with key issues of film history and screen politics that are overlooked by the traditional canon of Chinese cinema. Tackling key debates on (post)colonialism, (cold)war, and their sociopolitical impacts on screen culture in these regions, this collection challenges the binary paradigms that are perpetuated in the historical scholarship of Chinese cinema, such as left-wing and right-wing cinema, commercial entertainment and political propaganda films, and mass consumption of genre films versus the critical acclaim of New Wave auteurism. Together, the essays reveal the cultural mobility across different geographic and sociopolitical borders, their intertwined experience of the past, and historical events’ impact on contemporary filmmaking and screen cultures.
This collection will be of interest to students and researchers of Film, Media, and Cultural Studies as well as Asian Studies and Chinese Studies.
"Opening this anthology presents the reader with the extraordinary pleasure of discovering a selection of essays that is highly diverse yet shares fresh vitality. Ranging from the cinema of the 1930s Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo to the “new mainstream” movies of the present-day People’s Republic, and from textual analysis to media industries research and archive work, they confirm how much more Chinese cinema – defined as broadly as possible – has to offer."
- Chris Berry, King’s College London
ISBN: 9781032458168
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
330 pages