Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Rutgers University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
1. Censorship as Cultural Resistance: The Chinese Government’s “Uplift” of National Images in 1930s Hollywood
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Diplomatic Representations in Classical Hollywood
- 1. Censorship as Cultural Resistance: The Chinese Government’s “Uplift” of National Images in 1930s Hollywood 19
- 2. Justified Patricide and (Im)Properly Directed Hatred: Regulating the Representations of Chinese and Japanese in Doolittle Raid Films 60
- 3. Beyond the Propaganda Model: The Pentagon as a Technical Advisor for Brainwashing Films of the Cold War Era 94
-
Part II. The War on Terror, Contemporary Hollywood, and Its Global Discontents
- 4. From Die Another Day to “Another Day”: The Anti-007 Movement, Pan-Asian Nationalism, and Protests as Censorship 131
- 5. The Interview as a Twenty-First- Century Great Dictator? Rethinking Film Regulation and Foreign Relations through the Sony Crisis 156
- Conclusion: Chinese Censors Return to Hollywood 178
- Appendix 189
- Acknowledgments 195
- Notes 197
- Index 227
- About the Author 245
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Diplomatic Representations in Classical Hollywood
- 1. Censorship as Cultural Resistance: The Chinese Government’s “Uplift” of National Images in 1930s Hollywood 19
- 2. Justified Patricide and (Im)Properly Directed Hatred: Regulating the Representations of Chinese and Japanese in Doolittle Raid Films 60
- 3. Beyond the Propaganda Model: The Pentagon as a Technical Advisor for Brainwashing Films of the Cold War Era 94
-
Part II. The War on Terror, Contemporary Hollywood, and Its Global Discontents
- 4. From Die Another Day to “Another Day”: The Anti-007 Movement, Pan-Asian Nationalism, and Protests as Censorship 131
- 5. The Interview as a Twenty-First- Century Great Dictator? Rethinking Film Regulation and Foreign Relations through the Sony Crisis 156
- Conclusion: Chinese Censors Return to Hollywood 178
- Appendix 189
- Acknowledgments 195
- Notes 197
- Index 227
- About the Author 245