Contemporary Art Cinema Culture in China
By (Author) Xiang Fan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
26th December 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
791.430951
Hardback
208
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
How do contemporary Chinese audiences access art cinema What are the alternative channels for the distribution and exhibition of art cinema in China How is Chinese art cinema changing with the booming of internet media and commodity culture in the 21st century To answer these questions, Xiang Fan explores the dynamic networks of art cinema in China in the 21st century, highlighting the cultural practices of intermediaries such as independent programmers, internet critics, and fan translators. Offering insights gleaned from original ethnographic research, Fan reveals how these intermediary practitioners think about cinema, negotiate judgement and appreciation, construct a discourse of value and taste, and most importantly, constitute a coordinated and interrelated network for the sharing of art cinema. She argues that although their motivation was derived from a cinephilia seeking to forge an alternative mode of distribution and reception, the new cinema culture they have produced simultaneously negotiates a subtly complicit relationship with authoritative and market forces. In doing so, she offers an original interdisciplinary perspective on contemporary art cinema culture in Chinese society.
Xiang Fans exemplary ethnography lifts the lid on Chinas cinephile culture, caught between the market economy and one-party state, to reveal the venue operators, amateur critics, and fansubbers whose dedication and determination makes it survive and often even thrive. -- Chris Berry, Kings College London, UK
Contemporary Art Cinema Culture in China challenges the mainstream/independent dichotomy in Chinese film studies scholarship; it offers a much-needed non-Western perspective on the global discourse of art cinema. Shifting the research focus from the film text to the audience, from institutions to individuals, and from production to circulation, exhibition and consumption, the book champions a welcome sociological and ethnographic approach to the study of film culture. -- Hongwei Bao, author of Queer Media in China
In her absorbing study of contemporary Chinese art cinemas distribution, exhibition, and consumption, Xiang Fan reveals, though interviews and participant observation, how a range of institutions and intermediariesfrom film programmers to fan subbers and from internet critics to pirate DVD vendorshelp shape this emerging film culture. -- Luke Robinson, University of Sussex, UK
Xiang Fan is Postdoctoral Research Associate for the Chinese Independent Film Archive at Newcastle University, UK. She holds a PhD in Media Communications and Cultural Studies from Goldsmiths University of London. Her research interests include Chinese independent and art cinema, film festivals and exhibition culture in the digital age, and womens cinema.