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Lightness of Being in China

Adaptation and Discursive Figuration in Cinema and Theater

by Harry H. Kuoshu (Author)
©2000 Monographs XIV, 186 Pages
Series: Asian Thought and Culture, Volume 37

Summary

This study investigates how ideological discourses in China, especially the national-culture and social-class discourses, dictate cinematic and theatrical figuration. It focuses on a few groups of figures, on screen or stage, to explore their changes (refigurations) as they are adapted from literary texts. It illustrates how social and cultural concerns, at various moments in recent Chinese history, wrestle with each other for an ideologically figurative genesis. Providing insightful contextual overviews supported by the richness of textual details, the study promotes an educated understanding of recent Chinese representation, especially that in cinema.

Details

Pages
XIV, 186
Year
2000
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820445434
Language
English
Keywords
National-culture Social-class discourse Ideology Cinematography Chinese culture
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Wien, 1999. XIV, 186 pp., 6 ill.

Biographical notes

Harry H. Kuoshu (Author)

The Author: Harry H. Kuoshu, aka Haixin Xu, is Assistant Professor of Cinema Studies and Modern Languages at Northeastern University. He received his Ph.D. from Cornell University. In addition to articles on cinema and Chinese studies in professional journals, he co-translated Laughing Lost in the Mountains: Poems of Wang Wei and Cinema and Desire: Feminist Marxism and Cultural Politics in the Work of Dai Jinhua.

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Title: Lightness of Being in China