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The Colonial Screen

Early Cinema in Hong Kong

by Emilie Yueh-yu Yeh

Type
Studies
Subject
CountriesHong Kong
Keywords
Hong Kong, early cinema
Publishing date
2025 (October 14, 2025)
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Paperback • 232 pages
6 x 9 ¼ inches (15.5 x 23.5 cm)
ISBN
978-0-19-780057-7
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Book Presentation:
Hong Kong is known as an entrepôt in its colonial history, but its place in early cinema has not received the same scholarly attention. The Colonial Screen: Early Cinema in Hong Kong explores the exhibition, regulation, circulation, reception, and social place of motion pictures, from the time the cinematograph, an early mechanism for motion pictures, first arrived in the territory in 1897 through to the late 1920s when Hong Kong emerged as a film entrepôt in South China.

Drawing on concepts of screen practice, dispositif (deployment, apparatus), kinematography (motion pictures before cinema), and entrepôt, author Emilie Yueh-yu Yeh presents an unknown history of early film in Hong Kong. She traces the transition from film exhibition as a tie-in with staged entertainment to a full-fledged attraction of its own, acquiring a niche position in local society, and explores the roles of showmen, technologies, regulation, movie theatres, and entertainers. In each chapter, she brings to light the historical significance of Hong Kong as a regional node in movie trade routes and how racial politics and commerce were behind the British "rule of law" in making film regulations. Yeh locates the reception of motion pictures in the time of colonial modernity and governance, unveiling how, despite the dominance of European entrepreneurs in the exhibition circuit, the rise of Hong Kong Amusements in the early 1920s shaped a localized film practice. Ultimately, The Colonial Screen adds an important frame to Hong Kong as a film entrepôt across multiple borders and different regions in China in the early twentieth century.

About the Author:
Emilie Yueh-yu Yeh has been teaching in Hong Kong since 1997. She is Lam Wong Yiu Wah Chair Professor of Visual Studies, Dean of the Faculty of Arts, and Director of Centre for Film and Creative Industries at Lingnan University, Hong Kong. Formerly she was Professor and Director of the Academy of Film at Hong Kong Baptist University. Yeh's publications include ten books--including Early Film Culture in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Republican China: Kaleidoscopic Histories (as editor) and Staging Memories: Hou Hsiao-hsien's City of Sadness (co-authored with Abe-Nornes Markus)--and more than 70 book chapters and journal articles.

See the publisher website: Oxford University Press

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