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8. Sound, Allusion, and the “Wandering Songstress” in Royston Tan’s Films
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Alison M. Groppe
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction 1
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Part I: Politics and Dissent in Global Contexts
- 1. Seeing (through) the Struggle Sessions: Cinema, Recycling, and Transnational Circulation 17
- 2. Screening Politics in Hong Kong 41
- 3. “All of Us Are Part of the Monster”: Toxic Sublimity and Ethical Reflexivity in Zhao Liang’s Behemoth 58
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Part II: Audiences and Reception in Transnational Contexts
- 4. From Gone with the Wind to The Spring River Flows East: Melodrama and Historical Imagination in Postwar Chinese Cinema 77
- 5. Spatial Perception: The Aesthetics of Yijing in Transnational Kung Fu Films 97
- 6. Global Network, Ecocinema, and Chinese Contexts: Wolf Totem as a Successful Model of Transnational Coproduction 113
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Part III: Globalization and Chinese Identities
- 7. The Sound of Chinese Urban Cinema: Multilingualism and the Re-globalization of Shanghai in the 1990s 129
- 8. Sound, Allusion, and the “Wandering Songstress” in Royston Tan’s Films 152
- 9. Implicit Sexuality: The Representation of the Femme Fatale Figure in Black Coal, Thin Ice 169
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Part IV: Film Markets and Financial Reform
- 10. The China Film Co., Ltd. and the Stock Market: Financialization with Chinese Characteristics 183
- 11. Big Shot’s Funeral: Sino-Foreign Collaboration and Industrial Commercialization 204
- 12. Sticks, Not Carrots: The Discourse of Soft Power in Popular Chinese Cinema 223
- Epilogue 242
- Contributors 249
- Index 253
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction 1
-
Part I: Politics and Dissent in Global Contexts
- 1. Seeing (through) the Struggle Sessions: Cinema, Recycling, and Transnational Circulation 17
- 2. Screening Politics in Hong Kong 41
- 3. “All of Us Are Part of the Monster”: Toxic Sublimity and Ethical Reflexivity in Zhao Liang’s Behemoth 58
-
Part II: Audiences and Reception in Transnational Contexts
- 4. From Gone with the Wind to The Spring River Flows East: Melodrama and Historical Imagination in Postwar Chinese Cinema 77
- 5. Spatial Perception: The Aesthetics of Yijing in Transnational Kung Fu Films 97
- 6. Global Network, Ecocinema, and Chinese Contexts: Wolf Totem as a Successful Model of Transnational Coproduction 113
-
Part III: Globalization and Chinese Identities
- 7. The Sound of Chinese Urban Cinema: Multilingualism and the Re-globalization of Shanghai in the 1990s 129
- 8. Sound, Allusion, and the “Wandering Songstress” in Royston Tan’s Films 152
- 9. Implicit Sexuality: The Representation of the Femme Fatale Figure in Black Coal, Thin Ice 169
-
Part IV: Film Markets and Financial Reform
- 10. The China Film Co., Ltd. and the Stock Market: Financialization with Chinese Characteristics 183
- 11. Big Shot’s Funeral: Sino-Foreign Collaboration and Industrial Commercialization 204
- 12. Sticks, Not Carrots: The Discourse of Soft Power in Popular Chinese Cinema 223
- Epilogue 242
- Contributors 249
- Index 253