Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Hong Kong Cinema: Coloniser, Motherland and Self. By Yingchi Chu. [London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2002. xxi+184 pp. £55.00. ISBN 0-7007-1746-3.]

View through CrossRef
The recent success of Jackie Chan, Chow Yun-fat, Jet Li, Wong Kar-wai, and John Woo in reaching a global audience, along with the enormous changes in Hong Kong since the early 1990s, has attracted a lot of critical attention to Hong Kong cinema around the world. Beginning with Stephen Teo's Hong Kong Cinema (1997) and David Bordwell's Planet Hong Kong (2000), scholarship on the cinema of Hong Kong – whether from the perspective of cultural identity, global culture, film history, or film art – has greatly expanded. Australian scholar Yingchi Chu's book, Hong Kong Cinema: Coloniser, Motherland and Self, contributes to this growing trend.Hong Kong Cinema is a brief but ambitious book. In less than 150 pages, it tries to map out the entire history of the cinema, from the 1910s to developments after the 1997 takeover. The book draws on a provocative conceptual framework to provide a sweeping overview of Hong Kong cinema and offers some fascinating observations on the industry. However, the book needs further revisions to bring out its rich potential.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Hong Kong Cinema: Coloniser, Motherland and Self. By Yingchi Chu. [London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2002. xxi+184 pp. £55.00. ISBN 0-7007-1746-3.]
Description:
The recent success of Jackie Chan, Chow Yun-fat, Jet Li, Wong Kar-wai, and John Woo in reaching a global audience, along with the enormous changes in Hong Kong since the early 1990s, has attracted a lot of critical attention to Hong Kong cinema around the world.
Beginning with Stephen Teo's Hong Kong Cinema (1997) and David Bordwell's Planet Hong Kong (2000), scholarship on the cinema of Hong Kong – whether from the perspective of cultural identity, global culture, film history, or film art – has greatly expanded.
Australian scholar Yingchi Chu's book, Hong Kong Cinema: Coloniser, Motherland and Self, contributes to this growing trend.
Hong Kong Cinema is a brief but ambitious book.
In less than 150 pages, it tries to map out the entire history of the cinema, from the 1910s to developments after the 1997 takeover.
The book draws on a provocative conceptual framework to provide a sweeping overview of Hong Kong cinema and offers some fascinating observations on the industry.
However, the book needs further revisions to bring out its rich potential.

Related Results

Résumés des conférences JRANF 2021
Résumés des conférences JRANF 2021
able des matières Résumés. 140 Agenda Formation en Radioprotection JRANF 2021 Ouagadougou. 140 RPF 1 Rappel des unités de doses. 140 RPF 2 Risques déterministes et stochastique...
Challenges and opportunities of Chinese ports: the multi-faced perspectives
Challenges and opportunities of Chinese ports: the multi-faced perspectives
(English) In this thesis, challenges and opportunities of Chinese ports and shipping is investigated from the multi-faced perspectives, i.e., the challenges between ports in the ba...
Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong
Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong
The Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong (HKSAR) was established in 1997 when China recovered sovereignty over Hong Kong following the terms set out in the 1984 Sino-British ...
Conurban
Conurban
Conurbation [f. CON- + L. urb- and urbs city + -ation] An aggregation of urban areas. (OED) Beyond the urban, further and lower even than the suburban, lies th...
Reviews
Reviews
Abstract Navigating the Spanish Lake: The Pacific in the Iberian World, 1521–1898, Rainer Buschmann, Edward Slack Jr and James Tueller (2014) Honolulu: University of...
Hong Kong as Method of The Grandmaster: Wing Chun, Hong Kong Film to Hong Kong Culture
Hong Kong as Method of The Grandmaster: Wing Chun, Hong Kong Film to Hong Kong Culture
I undertake a close reading of Wong Kar-wai’s The Grandmaster (2013) to outline how a somatechnics of the body in wing chun, a form of martial art, provides a way to understand ‘Ho...
Is a Fitbit a Diary? Self-Tracking and Autobiography
Is a Fitbit a Diary? Self-Tracking and Autobiography
Data becomes something of a mirror in which people see themselves reflected. (Sorapure 270)In a 2014 essay for The New Yorker, the humourist David Sedaris recounts an obsession spu...

Back to Top