China's iGeneration: Cinema and Moving Image Culture for the Twenty-First Century
Editat de Matthew D. Johnson, Keith B. Wagner, PhD Kiki Tianqi Yu, Luke Vulpianien Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 noi 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501315749
ISBN-10: 1501315749
Pagini: 368
Ilustrații: 10 illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1501315749
Pagini: 368
Ilustrații: 10 illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Addresses films and modes of production, distribution, and consumption not discussed elsewhere
Notă biografică
Matthew D. Johnson is Assistant Professor of East Asian History at Grinnell College, US. As a doctoral student at the University of California, San Diego he conducted one of the first oral histories of China's early socialist film industry. His scholarly writing focuses on the history of the motion picture in China; documentary cinema and practice; public cultural service and security; and U.S.-China transnational relations. He is a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Chinese Cinemas.Keith B. Wagner is an Assistant Professor of Film Studies and Social Theory in the Graduate School of Film and Digital Media at Hongik University in Seoul, South Korea. Before moving to Asia, he completed his M.Phil degree at the University of Cambridge and his PhD at King's College London. He is the co-editor of Neoliberalism and Global Cinema: Capital, Culture and Marxist Critique (2011) and is completing a manuscript based on his dissertation entitled Living with Uncertainty: Precarious Labor in Global Cinema.Kiki Tianqi Yu is a filmmaker and Lecturer in Film at the University of the West of Scotland, UK. She publishes on first person documentary, Chinese documentary, camera activism, amateur cinema culture, and cinematic memory in Studies in Documentary Film, Journal of Chinese Cinemas, and Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art, among others. Yu is the author of 'My' Self On Camera: First Person Documentary Practice in 21st century China (2018). As a filmmaker, her film works include Photographing Shenzhen (2007), Memory of Home (2009) and the recent feature length documentary film China's van Gogh (2016).Luke Vulpiani is a PhD candidate at King's College London under the supervision of Dr Viktor Fan. He has a 1st Class BA Degree in Film Studies from The University of Warwick and a MA in Chinese Studies from SOAS, University of London. His research focuses on aesthetic theory, Chinese film and the relationship between film and philosophy, psychoanalysis and politics.
Cuprins
Foreword, Chris Berry Acknowledgements Notes on Transliteration INTRODUCTION: China's iGeneration Cinema, Keith B. Wagner, Tianqi Yu, Luke Vulpiani PART I. New Technologies CHAPTER 1Tianqi YU "Toward a Communicative Practice: Female First-Person Documentary in Twenty-first Century China" CHAPTER 2Paola VOCI "Quasi-Documentary, Cellflix, and Web Spoofs: Chinese Movies' Other Visual Pleasures" CHAPTER 3Weihua WU "Individuality, State Discourse, and Visual Representation: The Imagination and Practices of the iGeneration in Chinese Animation" CHAPTER 4Bingfeng DONG "Cinema of Exhibition: Film in Chinese Contemporary Art" PART II. Aesthetics CHAPTER 5 Luke VULPIANI "Goodbye to the Grim Real, Hello to What Comes Next: The Moment of Passage from the Sixth Generation to the iGeneration" CHAPTER 6 Ling ZHANG "Digitizing City Symphony, Stabilizing the Shadow of Time: Montage and Temporal-Spatial Construction in San Yuan Li" CHAPTER 7 Dan GAO "From Pirate to Kino-eye: A Genealogical Tale of Film Re-Distribution in China" CHAPTER 8Keith B. WAGNER "Xue Jianqiang as Reckless Documentarian: Underdevelopment and Juvenile Crime in post-WTO China" PART III. Social Engagement CHAPTER 9Yiman WANG "Of Animals and Men: Toward A Theory of Docu-ani-mentary" CHAPTER 10Ying QIAN "Working with Rubble: Montage, Tweets, and the Reconstruction of an Activist Cinema" CHAPTER 11Jia TAN "Provincializing the Chinese Mediascape: Cantonese Digital Activism in Southern China" PART IV. Platforms and Politics CHAPTER 12Jeesoon HONG with Matthew D. JOHNSON "Shanghai Expo and Screen-Spaces: Big Screens and New Collectivity" CHAPTER 13Ma RAN "Regarding the Grassroots Chinese Independent Film Festivals: Regional Assemblage and Abnormal Film Networking" CHAPTER 14Matthew D. JOHNSON "Wu Wenguang and the NGO Aesthetic" CHAPTER 15Xiaomei CHEN "The Cinematic Deng Xiaoping: Reform or Restoration?" PART V: Online Audiences CHAPTER 16Ralph PARFECT "You Must Believe There is Such a Person in This World": Internet Contention of Zhang Yimou's Sexual Storytelling in Under the Hawthorn Tree/Shanzhashu Zhi Lian" CHAPTER 17 Xiao LIU "From the Glaring Sun to the Flying Bullets: The Dilemma of Elliptical Memories in "post-" Era Chinese Cinema" Notes on Contributors Index
Recenzii
China's iGeneration successfully satisfies the reader's curiosity about China - a worldupcoming nation, and demonstrates the transformation and development of Chinese Cinema from different perspectives through essays written by both Chinese and non- Chinese writers . All in all, the strength of China's iGeneration is in its careful introduction of the uniqueness of Chinese culture for those who have not been exposed to such concepts before. At the same time, it expresses the authors' deep understanding and knowledge of fastchanging dynamics in Chinese cinema culture. We all know that China is the world's second-largest economy, with a rich and unique culture and historical background. Now China's iGeneration presents the 'new' generation through its cinematic point of view and provides readers with a fresh perspective on this great nation.
. these essays successfully achieve the aim of 'mapping out where this moving image culture exists within the context of China's individualizing, consumption-oriented, urban and technologically mutable post-WTO society' (1), and the book will certainly engender further research in this rich and evolving subject area.
China's iGeneration boldly projects a new cinema of dispersion for the era of neoliberalism with Chinese characteristics and elaborates its implications both for a historiographical move beyond China's Sixth or Urban Generation and for a paradigm shift from film studies to screen studies. Refreshing and provocative, the collection breaks new ground in rethinking issues such as digital activism, personal documentary, NGO aesthetics, video piracy, unofficial exhibition, and online reception.
Filmgoers around the world marvel at the achievements of China's Fifth and Sixth Generations, lauded at major film festivals for their enormous contributions to international film aesthetics. However, as this anthology makes abundantly clear, a new generation of motion picture artists/activists now make their mark on global digital culture using the latest technologies (such as mobile phone cameras) and exploring screen spaces far beyond the multiplex (through social media and other platforms). The "i" in the book's title-in humble lower case (less self-absorbed than the "me" generation elsewhere)-speaks to a new sense of the individual as the Internet, iPhones, and iPads transform post-WTO Chinese society. China's iGeneration serves as the essential guide to this emerging digital landscape providing robust new scholarship highlighting the Chinese contribution to its creation.
This volume of essays on the culture of the moving image in contemporary China strikes bold new ground in how we conceptualise "cinema", both in China and elsewhere. Moving away from notions of film dominated by the box office and the big screen, these consistently fascinating essays - written by both established and emerging scholars - argue collectively for what they call a "cinema of dispersion": an understanding of film for the digital epoch which acknowledges that cinematic culture is as mobile and mutable as the people who make and watch it.
. these essays successfully achieve the aim of 'mapping out where this moving image culture exists within the context of China's individualizing, consumption-oriented, urban and technologically mutable post-WTO society' (1), and the book will certainly engender further research in this rich and evolving subject area.
China's iGeneration boldly projects a new cinema of dispersion for the era of neoliberalism with Chinese characteristics and elaborates its implications both for a historiographical move beyond China's Sixth or Urban Generation and for a paradigm shift from film studies to screen studies. Refreshing and provocative, the collection breaks new ground in rethinking issues such as digital activism, personal documentary, NGO aesthetics, video piracy, unofficial exhibition, and online reception.
Filmgoers around the world marvel at the achievements of China's Fifth and Sixth Generations, lauded at major film festivals for their enormous contributions to international film aesthetics. However, as this anthology makes abundantly clear, a new generation of motion picture artists/activists now make their mark on global digital culture using the latest technologies (such as mobile phone cameras) and exploring screen spaces far beyond the multiplex (through social media and other platforms). The "i" in the book's title-in humble lower case (less self-absorbed than the "me" generation elsewhere)-speaks to a new sense of the individual as the Internet, iPhones, and iPads transform post-WTO Chinese society. China's iGeneration serves as the essential guide to this emerging digital landscape providing robust new scholarship highlighting the Chinese contribution to its creation.
This volume of essays on the culture of the moving image in contemporary China strikes bold new ground in how we conceptualise "cinema", both in China and elsewhere. Moving away from notions of film dominated by the box office and the big screen, these consistently fascinating essays - written by both established and emerging scholars - argue collectively for what they call a "cinema of dispersion": an understanding of film for the digital epoch which acknowledges that cinematic culture is as mobile and mutable as the people who make and watch it.