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The political economy and culture of Chinese cinema during the era of China's prolonged economic reform has not until now been examined in detail. Ying Zhu's new and comprehensive study examines the institutional as well as the stylistic transitions of Chinese cinema from pedagogy to art to commerce, focusing on the key film reform measures as well as the metamorphosis of Chinese Fifth Generation films from art film narration-as in Chen Kaige's 1984 Yellow Earth-to post-New-Wave classical film narration-as in the same director's 1993 Farewell, My Concubine. Zhu's work reconciles the stylistic, cultural, and economic dimensions of the nation's cinematic output, also providing the first systematic institutional analysis of an industry in a state of constant flux.
YING ZHU is Assistant Professor of Media Culture at the College of Staten Island, City University of New York.
Foreword Preface Chinese Cinema: A Culture and and Economy in Disarray Cinematic Modernization and Chinese Cinems"s Firt Art Wave Economic Reform and Populist Cinematic Revival From New Wave to Post-New Wave Post-Wave: "It's the Economy, Stupid" Shadowplay: Early Chinese Cinema in the Shadow of Hollywood Chinese Cinema: A Cultural or and Economic Issue? Index
Min Min, Mary Bambacas, Ying Zhu, Australia) Min, Min (University of South Australia, Australia) Bambacas, Mary (University of South Australia, Australia) Zhu, Ying (University of South Australia
Chang Jae Lee, You-il Lee, John Benson, Ying Zhu, Yoon-Jong Jang, South Korea) Lee, Chang Jae (Korea Institute for International Economic Policy, Australia) Lee, You-il (University of South Australia, Malaysia) Benson, John (Monash University Malaysia, Australia) Zhu, Ying (University of South Australia, Yoon-Jong (Korea Development Institute) Jang, You-Il Lee
Shuang Ren, Robert Wood, Ying Zhu, Australia) Ren, Shuang (University of Melbourne, Australia) Wood, Robert (University of Melbourne, Ying (University of South Australia) Zhu