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[Commlist] New featured content on Screen Studies: Cinema of Mainland China
Mon Mar 13 17:07:07 GMT 2023
We are excited to announce that the latest featured content
<https://www.screenstudies.com/featured-content> has launched today on
Screen Studies <https://www.screenstudies.com/>, focusing on the history
of cinema in Mainland China.
Since Shanghai's Golden Period of the 1930s, film production in China
has undergone alternating periods of boom and collapse, with varying
degrees of state control and censure. These same conditions have also
made it so that, rather than a singular centre of cinema production,
there have developed several distinct national cinemas, primarily those
of Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. Through a *new short essay and
nine free-to-view chapters*, the new featured content allows you to:
* Delve in to the complexities of cinema during Seventeen Years
(1949-1966) with this chapter
<https://www.screenstudies.com/encyclopedia-chapter?docid=b-9781838711337&tocid=b-9781838711337-chapter9&pdfid=9781838711337.ch-009.pdf> from
/The Chinese Cinema Book/, and examine how a narrow range of
state-sanctioned subject matter and style led to a decline in film
production
* Analyse the rapid expansion of television stations, coverage,
ownership of TV sets, and the increased demand for television
programming that occurred in the decade after the Cultural
Revolution in this chapter
<https://www.screenstudies.com/encyclopedia-chapter?docid=b-9780203798751&tocid=b-9780203798751-chapter5&pdfid=9780203798751.ch-005.pdf> in
/Television Regulation and Media Policy in China/
* Explore the rise of the geren dianying (personal film) during the
1990s in this chapter
<https://www.screenstudies.com/encyclopedia-chapter?docid=b-9781501312663&tocid=b-9781501312663-chapter18&st=jia+zhangke%27s+hometown> from
/The Global Auteur/. These personal films engage the viewers in a
cinematographic experience in which the self and the other, the
subjective and the objective, are renegotiated
* Examine the way in which critics dichotomised 1930s Shanghai cinema
into Hard films (yingxing dianying) and Soft films (ruanxing
dianying), and how some films, such as Zhengqiu Zheng’s /Zimei
hua/ (Twin Sisters, 1934) rebelled against that dichotomy, inthis
chapter
<https://www.screenstudies.com/encyclopedia-chapter?docid=b-9781838711337&tocid=b-9781838711337-chapter6&st=shanghai+cinema> from
/The Chinese Cinema Book/
* Consider the way in which film culture exists at the local and
subnational level in a large nation like China in this chapter
<https://www.screenstudies.com/encyclopedia-chapter?docid=b-9781350234215&tocid=b-9781350234215-0000111&pdfid=9781350234215-006.pdf#ftn.b-9781350234215-5000016>from
/Contemporary Chinese Cinema and Visual Culture/
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Also new to Screen Studies this month is our spotlight piece, focusing
on//*Jia Zhangke*, one of China’s leading independent filmmakers.//
Our Spotlight piece on the filmmaker
<https://www.screenstudies.com/spotlight>, a key figure of the Sixth
Generation, opens up *two free-to-view chapters *that explore the ways
in which Jia captured the realities of contemporary urban life in his
work, and how his filmic impulse was born out of the rapid social and
infrastructural changes taking place in Chinese cities during the 1990s.
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