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The book examines recent developments in Taiwan cinema, with particular focus on a leading contemporary Taiwan filmmaker, Wei Te-sheng, who is responsible for such Asian blockbusters as Cape No.7, Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale and Kano. The book discusses key issues, including: why (until about 2008) Taiwan cinema underwent a decline, and how cinema is portraying current social changes in Taiwan, including changing youth culture and how it represents indigenous people in the historical narrative of Taiwan. The book also explores the reasons why current Taiwan cinema is receiving a much less enthusiastic response globally compared to its reception in previous decades.
Kuei-fen Chiu is Professor of Taiwan Literature and Transnational Cultural Studies at National Chung Hsing University, Taiwan.Ming-yeh T. Rawnsley is a Research Associate in the Centre of Taiwan Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, UK.Gary Rawnsley is Professor of Public Diplomacy in the Department of International Politics at Aberystwyth University, UK.
1. From Taiwan New Cinema to Post-New Cinema: An Introduction, Kuei-fen ChiuPart I: International Reception and Taiwan Cinema2. Taiwan Cinema across the Globe: A Brazilian Perspective3. Variables of Transnational Authorship: Hou Hsiao-hsien and Wei Te-sheng4. Taiwan Cinema at the Venice Film Festival: From Cultural Discovery to Cultural Diplomacy5. Contesting the National, Labelling the Renaissance: Exhibiting Taiwan Cinema at Film Festivals in Japan since the 1980s6. Programming Taiwan Cinema: A View from the International Film Festival Circuit7. Interventions on Cultural Margins: The Case of the Chinese Film Forum UK and the Presence of Taiwan Cinema in the UKPart II: Taiwan Cinema and Social Change8. Becoming a Nation: The Shaping of Taiwan’s Native Consciousness in Wei Te-sheng’s Post-Millennium Films9. Imagine There’s No China: Wei Te-sheng and Taiwan’s ‘Japan Complex’10. Kano and Taiwanese Baseball: Playing with Transregionality and Postcoloniality11. Seediq Bale as History12. Violence and Indigenous Visual History: Interventional Historiography in Seediq Bale and Wushe, Chuanzhong Island13. Archiving an Historical Incident: The Making of Seediq Bale as a Socio-Political Event14. Mona Rudao’s Scar: Two Kinds of Epic Identity in Seediq BalePart III: Interview and Supplement15. A Conversation with Taiwanese Filmmaker Wei Te-sheng
Chris Berry, Wafa Ghermani, Corrado Neri, Ming-yeh Rawnsley, King’s College London) Berry, Chris (Professor of Film Studies, Taiwan Central University) Ghermani, Wafa (assistant professor at Taiwan Central University, Lyon 3) Neri, Corrado (associate professor at the Jean Moulin University, Lyon 3, Jean Moulin University, Taiwan) Rawnsley, Ming-yeh (Research Associate, Centre of Taiwan Studies, SOAS University of London, _x000D_Institute of Sociology, Academia Sinica, Ming-Yeh Rawnsley
Kuei-fen Chiu, Dafydd Fell, Lin Ping, Taiwan) Chiu, Kuei-fen (National Chung-hsing University, UK) Fell, Dafydd (School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Taiwan) Ping, Lin (National Chung Cheng University, Kuei-Fen Chiu
Kuei-fen Chiu, Dafydd Fell, Lin Ping, Taiwan) Chiu, Kuei-fen (National Chung-hsing University, UK) Fell, Dafydd (School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Taiwan) Ping, Lin (National Chung Cheng University, Kuei-Fen Chiu