Introduction: The Sorrows and Joys of Chinese Filmmaking: Political
and Personal Contexts
Chapter 1: Shanghai Twenties: Early Chinese Cinematic Explorations
of the Modern Marriage
Chapter 2: The Theme of Spiritual Pollution in Chinese Films of the
1930s
Chapter 3: Melodramatic Representation and the May Fourth Tradition
of Chinese Cinema
Chapter 4: Never-Ending Controversies: The Case of Remorse in
Shanghai and Occupation-Era
Chinese Filmmaking
Chapter 5: Victory as Defeat: Postwar Visualizations of China’s War
of Resistance
Chapter 6: Acting like Revolutionaries: Shi Hui, the Wenhua Studio,
and Private-Sector Filmmaking,
1949–1952
Chapter 7: Zheng Junli, Complicity, and the Cultural History of
Socialist China, 1949–1976
Chapter 8: The Limits of Cultural Thaw: Chinese Cinema in the Early
1960s
Chapter 9: Popular Cinema and Political Thought in Early Post-Mao
China: Reflections on Official
Pronouncements, Film, and the Film Audience
Chapter 10: On the Eve of Tiananmen: Huang Jianxin and the Notion
of Postsocialism
Chapter 11: Velvet Prisons and the Political Economy of Chinese
Filmmaking in the Late 1980s and
Early 1990s
Chapter 12: Social and Political Dynamics of Underground Filmmaking
in Early-Twenty-First-Century
China
Additional Work on Chinese Cinema
Paul G. Pickowicz is Distinguished Professor of History and Chinese Studies at the University of California, San Diego, and inaugural holder of the UC San Diego Endowed Chair in Modern Chinese History.
China on Film is a kaleidoscope of history, film, politics, and
personalities that scans a tumultuous landscape across nearly a
hundred years. The range is marvelous. We consider overarching
questions, but they are always brought to life in charming,
concrete detail. We meet some major figures in culture and politics
but bohemians and underground loners, too. We get our feet in
China’s earth but sense world currents as well. Our guide is a
specialist insider, yet enough of an outsider that he can walk past
taboos. As with any good kaleidoscope, this one sparkles at every
turn.
*Perry Link, University of California, Riverside*
This collection of essays by one of our preeminent scholars of
Chinese film history has given us a panoramic study of different
facets of Chinese filmmaking and filmmakers: from early films made
in 1920s Shanghai through each of the subsequent decades all the
way to the sociopolitical dynamics of today's underground
filmmaking. Each of the twelve chapters takes on a specific issue
or theme and relates it to the historical context in which it
arose. Altogether they form a cohesive framework and argument in
which the author's passionate commitment to Chinese cinema and
Chinese culture is felt on every page.
*Leo Ou-fan Lee, The Chinese University of Hong Kong*
This is the book on Chinese cinema that we have been waiting for.
Few people have as deep and wide-ranging an understanding of
Chinese film culture as Paul Pickowicz does. Admirably combining
vigorous research and penetrating analysis, he provides us in this
important book with an insightful, richly nuanced, and
thought-provoking representation of the multivalent relations
between popular cinema, social change, and political violence in
China’s recent history. Creatively organized around influential
filmmakers, controversial films, or historiographical themes, and
written in an engaging style, this is a must-read for anyone
interested in twentieth-century Chinese culture and society.
*Fu Poshek, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign*
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