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[Commlist] cfp:Starring Asian Femininities: Evolutions of Femaleness on Asian Screens
Mon Jun 27 15:20:33 GMT 2022
CALL FOR PAPERS
Starring Asian Femininities: Evolutions of Femaleness on Asian Screens
Editors: Lisa Gotto, Kirsty Fairclough & Ian Dixon
Series Editors: Sean Redmond & Jian Xu
What is it that Asian female stars offer the silver screen and the
worshippers who dedicate themselves to the confluence of gender and
sexual identity of such stars? What media conditions underlie the
production of Asian images of femininity? To what extent do female stars
in Asia transcend Western notions of fame, popularity, and celebrity?
What positions do they take on issues such as selfhood and identity? How
do they mediate unique combinations of conflicting ideologies?
Often incorrectly perceived as supporting dominant thought, normative
body images and the patriarchal order, this book shows how women stars
in Asia are developing voices of their own and challenging such
strictures. This is especially poignant because Asian stars often face
societal repressions uncommon in the West.
While the subject of Asian stardom has been broached convincingly in the
last decade, the femaleness of such stars is often subsumed within
greater debates on the validity of national cinemas and emerging
technologies. Leung and Willis’s East Asian Film Stars (2014) asks
whether star power is losing its edge in the West where, as Mike
Goodridge (2010) surmises, high-concept cinema is overtaking its
high-powered stars. By contrast, Leung and Willis argue that Asian stars
are still on the rise over the digital vehicles supporting them –
especially in East Asia. While Leung and Willis feature some significant
female stars including Maggie Cheung, Zhang Ziyi and Joan Chen, their
focus is less on gender issues than race, culture, nationality and
industrial relations. Similarly, Dorothy Wai Sim Lau’s study Chinese
Stardom in Participatory Cyberculture (2018) concentrates on new media
and Internet developments that have broken ground for Asian Stars,
rather than on the stars themselves. Cosmopolitan Cinema: Cross-cultural
Encounters in East Asian Film (2018) by Felicia Chan critiques the
ethics of engendering a star’s sense of belonging and the ‘cosmopolitan
allure’ of foreigners as a ‘psychic revolt’ against Asian hegemonic
‘parent culture’. Chan’s worthy argument questions the validity of
national cinema boundaries concentrating on East Asian film from Hong
Kong, China, Malaysia and Singapore, throwing doubt on national cinema
delineations and definitive cultural boundaries. Further, apart from
Paula Yoo’s Shining Star: The Anna May Wong Story (2009) and Irene
González-López and Michael Smith’s study of Tanaka Kinuyo (2018),
biographies of Asian stars tend to focus on male celebrities such as
Tony Leung, Jackie Chan and (new) Orientalist narratives such as those
espoused by Simu Liu.
With the exception of Female Celebrities in Contemporary Chinese Society
by Shenshen Cai, the above publications highlight industrial practices
for both (traditional) genders. By contrast, our dedication to
exclusively female pan-Asian stars remains unique. Contributors might
also like to consider stars who may not be exclusively cisgender women
but who identify as female on screen. The focus of Starring Asian
Femininities also covers stars from feature films under the influence of
social and new media – rather than the other way around. For this
co-edited volume in the series Asian Celebrity and Fandom Studies we
feature all female Asian celebrities with book editors Lisa Gotto,
Kirsty Fairclough and Ian Dixon. All currently engaged editors have a
history of collegiality and collaboration in film and celebrity studies
including the soon to be released I’m Not a Film Star: David Bowie as
Actor (2022) co-edited by Dixon. Fairclough recently published her
co-edited books The Legacy of Mad Men: Cultural History, Intermediality
and American Television (2019) as well as Prince and Popular Music
(2020). Gotto’s far reaching scholarship includes the publication of a
plethora of books such as Passing and Posing in Black and White:
Calibrating the Color Line in U.S. Cinema (2021) and Big Screens, Small
Forms: Visual Varieties in Digital Media Culture (2022).
Potential Subject Matter
• Gender representation
• Classic Stars
• Screen Elegance vs Tomboy-ism • Comediennes
• Stars of Third Cinema • Asian and Subcontinental Stars
• Crossover stardom
• Orientalism in contemporary iteration
• Oriental mistresses
• Trauma and Star Image
• Asia as feminised spectacle
• Ideology and Stardom
• East-West transference
• Celebrity Scandal
• Star Auteurism
• Female evolutions on screen
• Ideology and the star vehicle
• Stars and politics
We look forward to your contribution. Please send 300-word abstracts by
October 30th 2022 to (ian.dixon /at/ ntu.edu.sg)
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