Deze serie duikt in de rijke en gevarieerde wereld van de Oost-Aziatische cinema. Het verkent de belangrijkste genres, invloedrijke auteurs en de complexe verbanden tussen regionale filmtradities. Bovendien onderzoekt het de groei en impact van transnationale cinema, en biedt het een compleet beeld van hoe deze films de mondiale cultuur vormgeven. Lezers krijgen een diepe waardering voor de artistieke en culturele krachten die de cinema in deze dynamische regio aansturen.
In this ground-breaking investigation into the seldom-studied film culture of
colonial Korea (1910-1945), Dong Hoon Kim brings new perspectives to the
associations between colonialism, modernity, film historiography and national
cinema.
The first comprehensive collection on the subject of Hong Kong neo-noir
cinema, this book examines the way Hong Kong has developed its own unique and
culturally specific version of the neo-noir genre, while at the same time
drawing on and adapting existing international noir cinemas.
This book offers a new interpretation of Ozu Yasujiro's career, from his
earliest work in the 1920s up to his death in 1963, focusing on Ozu's
depiction of the everyday life and experiences of ordinary Japanese people
during a time of depression, war and economic resurgence.
How does cinema imagine our place in the world? This book looks at the studios, films and policies that charted the transnational vision of Hong Kong and Taiwan, two places with an uneasy relationship to the idea of nationhood. Examining the cultural, political and industrial overlaps between these cinemas - as well as the areas where they uniquely parallel each other - author Brian Hu brings together perspectives from cinema studies, Chinese studies and Asian American studies to show how culture is produced in the spaces between empires. With case studies of popular stars like Linda Lin Dai and Edison Chen, and spectacular genres like the Shaolin Temple cycle of martial arts films and the romantic melodramas of 1970s Taiwan, this book explores what it meant to be both cosmopolitan and Chinese in the second half of the twentieth century.