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BookDragon Blog

01 Jan / New Chinese Cinema: Challenging Representations by Sheila Cornelius with Ian Haydn Smith [in Push > for NAATA]

New Chinese CinemaAnother slim volume that offers a concise, informative overview of mainland Chinese cinema, with a focus on the last half-decade. Chinese cinema history can be loosely summarized in six generations, beginning with early 20-century pioneer filmmakers, who were followed by predominantly martial arts makers in the 1920s. The ‘30s and ‘40s marked the so-called “Golden Age” of Chinese films, during which Chinese films began to win international awards, while the later “fourth generation” produced Soviet-inspired propagandist films of the early Mao years. The Fifth Generation, however, put Chinese cinema into theaters all over the world – Chen Kaige (Farewell My Concubine), Zhang Yimou (Red Sorghum and Raise the Red Lantern), and Tian ZhuangZhuang (The Blue Kite) – as well as the luminous Gong Li. The Sixth Generation are post-Tiananmen Square filmmakers, who both expose conditions of modern life in China while rebelling against what they perceive as the lush, nostalgic style of the Fifth Generation.

Review: “Diasporic Proliferation or: We’re Here, There and Everywhere … and Growing,” Push >, NAATA: National Asian American Telecommunications Center (now the Center for Asian American Media), 2002

Readers: Adult

Published: 2002

By Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center in Adult Readers, Chinese, Nonfiction, Repost Tags > BookDragon, Center for Asian American Media, Film studies, Historical, Ian Haydn Smith, NAATA, New Chinese Cinema, Sheila Cornelius
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