Global Chinese Cinema: The Culture and Politics of 'Hero'
Gary D. Rawnsley, Ming-Yeh T. RawnsleyA big expensive film with multiple stars, spectacular scenery, and astonishing action sequences, it touched on key questions of Chinese culture, nation and politics, and was both a domestic sensation and an international hit.
This book explores the reasons for the film's popularity with its audiences, discussing the factors which so resonated with those who watched the film. It examines questions such as Chinese national unity, the search for cultural identity and role models from China's illustrious pre-communist past, and the portrayal of political and aesthetic values, and attitudes to gender, sex, love, and violence which are relatively new to China.
The book demonstrates how the film, and China's growing film industry more generally, have in fact very strong international connections, with Western as well as Chinese financing, stars recruited from the East Asian region more widely, and extensive interactions between Hollywood and Asian artists and technicians.
Overall, the book provides fascinating insights into recent developments in Chinese society, popular culture and cultural production.
CONTENTS.
Foreword / Chris Berry -- Introduction / Gary D. Rawnsley and Ming-Yeh T. Rawnsley -- The political narrative(s) of Hero / Gary D. Rawnsley -- Recycled heroes, invented tradition and transformed identity / Yingjie Guo -- Ruthless tyrant or compassionate hero? : Chinese popular nationalism and the myth of state origins / Yiyan Wang -- The king, the musician and the village idiot : images of manhood / Kam Louie -- Twenty-first century women warriors : variations on a traditional theme / Louise Edwards -- On tian xia ('all under heaven') in Zhang Yimou's Hero / Xiaoming Chen and Ming-Yeh T. Rawnsley -- Hero : rewriting the Chinese martial arts film genre / Haizhou Wang and Ming-Yeh T. Rawnsley -- "Wou