Screening China

Regular price €61.50
A01=Yingjin Zhang
asian cinema
asian film studies
asian films
asian movies
Author_Yingjin Zhang
Category=ATFA
Category=JBSL
changchun
chen kaige
china
chinese cinema
chinese film
chinese film criticism
chinese film production
chinese film studies
chinese filmmakers
chinese movies
chinese postmodernism
chinese studies
chungking express
communism
contemporary chinese cinema
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnic studies
film production in china
hong kong cinema
hou hsiao-hsien
john woo
postmodern
postmodern cinema
postmodern film
postmodernism
postmodernism in china
red sorghum
taipei
taiwan
taiwanese cinema
taiwanese films
taiwanese movies
tian zhuangzhuang
wong kar-wai
yellow earth
yingjin zhang
zhang yimou
zhang yuan
zhou xiaowen

Product details

  • ISBN 9780892641475
  • Dimensions: 159 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 2001
  • Publisher: The University of Michigan Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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When Chinese films are screened in the West, viewers often prize, debate, and critique the “Chineseness” presented therein. Critics, scholars, and cultural theorists, too, latch onto the ethnic and cultural markers in Chinese film, often applying their theories as if they were universally applicable and even independent of history. They study only a small number of films from a large body of available works, often with a unidirectional Eurocentric bias. As a result, Chinese filmmakers are caught between the Western consumer and critical demand for ethnic and cultural images and the local restrictions of economics and politics.
Screening China follows filmmakers’ efforts to reconfigure China and position their work between the global and the local. In Part I, Yingjin Zhang catalogs the lenses Western film critics have used to break down, neatly package, and closely scrutinize China. One of the chief examples is the narrative of Communist Party censorship in which the regime notoriously represses artists and repeatedly violates human rights. In Part II of Screening China, Zhang narrates how New Chinese Cinema struggled to break free of the ethnic and cultural representation sought by Western audiences, introducing readers to the numerous Chinese filmmakers who have used the space opened up by New Chinese Cinema to present China in all its social, historical, political, ethnic, cultural, and economic facets.

Yingjin Zhang is Professor of Chinese Literature and Film, Comparative Literature, and Cultural Studies at University of California, San Diego.