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Screening Communities

Negotiating Narratives of Empire, Nation, and the Cold War in Hong Kong Cinema

by Jing Jing Chang

Type
Essays
Subject
CountriesHong Kong
Keywords
Hong Kong, politics, ideology, cold war
Publishing date
2019
Publisher
Hong Kong University Press
Collection
Crossings: Asian Cinema and Media Culture
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Hardcover • 248 pages
6 x 9 inches (15 x 23 cm)
ISBN
978-988-8455-76-8
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Book Presentation:
Postwar Hong Kong cinema played an active role in building the colony’s community in the 1950s and 1960s. To Jing Jing Chang, the screening of movies in postwar Hong Kong was a process of showing the filmmakers’ visions for Hong Kong society and simultaneously an attempt to conceal their anxieties and mask their political agenda. It was a time when the city was a site of intense ideological struggles among the colonial government, Chinese Nationalists, and Communist sympathizers. The medium of film was recognized as a powerful tool for public persuasion and various camps competed to win over the hearts and minds of the audience. Screening Communities thus situates the history of postwar Hong Kong cinema at the intersection of Cold War politics, Chinese culture, and local society. Focusing on the genres of official documentary film, leftist family melodrama (lunlipian), and youth film, this study examines the triangulated relationship of colonial interventions in Hong Kong film culture, the rise of left-leaning Cantonese directors as new cultural elites, and the positioning of audiences as contributors to the colony’s journey toward industrial modernity. Filmmakers are shown having to constantly negotiate changing sociopolitical conditions: the Hong Kong government presenting itself as a collaborative ruling body, moral and didactic messages being adapted for commercial releases, and women becoming recognized as a driving force behind Hong Kong’s postwar industrial success. In putting forward a historical narrative that privileges the poetics and politics of shaping a local community through a continuous screening process, Screening Communities offers a new interpretation of the development of Hong Kong cinema―one that breaks away from the usual accounts of the “rise and fall” of the industry.

About the Author:
Jing Jing Chang is associate professor of film studies at Wilfrid Laurier University.

See the publisher website: Hong Kong University Press

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