Available Formats
Chinese Film: Realism and Convention from the Silent Era to the Digital Age
By (Author) Jason McGrath
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
9th May 2023
United States
General
Non Fiction
791.430951
Paperback
424
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 18mm
567g
A tour de force chronicling the development of realism in Chinese cinema
The history of Chinese cinema is as long and complicated as the tumultuous history of China itself. Be it the silent, the Communist, or the contemporary, each Chinese cinematic era has necessitated its own form in conversation with broader trends in politics and culture.
In Chinese Film, Jason McGrath tells this fascinating story by tracing the varied claims to cinematic realism made by Chinese filmmakers, officials, critics, and scholars. Understanding realism as a historical dynamic that is both enabled and mitigated by aesthetic conventions of the day, he analyzes it across six different types of claims: ontological, perceptual, fictional, social, prescriptive, and apophatic.
Through this method, McGrath makes major claims not just about Chinese cinema but also about realism as an aesthetic form that negotiates between cultural conventions and the ever-evolving real. He comes to envision it as more than just a cinematic question, showing how the struggle for realism is central to the Chinese struggle for modernity itself.
"This magisterial book is an extraordinary landmark in both Chinese film studies and the broader exploration of cinema itself. In his multifaceted paradigm of realism, Jason McGrath finds a master code for understanding Chinese film across the span of its history: conceptually vivid and analytically riveting, this superb study is a must-read for any student or scholar of the moving image."Margaret Hillenbrand, author of Negative Exposures: Knowing What Not to Know in Contemporary China
"Meticulously researched, Chinese Film focuses on the multiple manifestations of realism in the longue dure history, tracking a key aesthetic-political articulation embedded in the film medium in general and Chinese cinema in particular. Especially valuable is Jason McGraths insistence on situating each mode of realism and its transformation within richly textured historical contexts."Yiman Wang, author of Remaking Chinese Cinema: Through the Prism of Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Hollywood
Jason McGrath is professor in the Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of MinnesotaTwin Cities, where he also serves on the faculty in Moving Image, Media, and Sound Studies. He is author of Postsocialist Modernity: Chinese Cinema, Literature, and Criticism in the Market Age.