Independent Filmmaking across Borders in Contemporary Asia
Title
Independent Filmmaking across Borders in Contemporary Asia
Author
ISBN
9789048537921
Format
eBook PDF
Number of pages
278
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Discipline
Asian Studies
Also available as
Hardback - € 124,00
Table of Contents
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Introduction: Beyond the Homeland and Diaspora
Chapter One. Art of the Dissensual-Independent Border-Crossing Cinema in Asia
Chapter Two. A Landscape Over There: Rethinking Translocality in Zhang Lu's Border-Crossing Films
Chapter Three. Fading Hometown and Lost Paradise--Kuzoku's Politics of (Dis)location
Chapter Four. Li Ying's Films of Displacement: Towards an Im/Possible Chinese-in-Japan Cinema
Chapter Five. Okinawan Dream Show: Approaching Okinawa in Moving Image Works into the New Millennium
Chapter Six. Homecoming Myanmar: Midi Z (Zhao Deyin)'s Migration Machine and a Cinema of Precarity
Postscript: The Promise of Subversive Art
Index

Ran Ma

Independent Filmmaking across Borders in Contemporary Asia

Independent Filmmaking across Borders in Contemporary Asia examines an array of auteur-driven fiction and documentary independent film projects that have emerged since the turn of the millennium from East and Southeast Asia, a strand of transnational filmmaking that converges with Asia’s vibrant yet unevenly developed independent film movements amidst global neoliberalism. These projects bear witness to and are shaped by the ongoing historical processes of inter-Asia interaction characterized by geopolitical realignment, migration, and population displacement. This study threads together case studies of internationally acclaimed filmmakers, artists, and collectives such as Zhang Lu, Kuzoku, Li Ying, Takamine Go, Yamashiro Chikako, and Midi Z, all of whose transborder journeys and cinematic imaginations disrupt static identity affiliations built upon national, ethnic, or cultural differences. This border-crossing filmmaking can be viewed as both an aesthetic practice and a political act, reframing how people, places, and their interconnections can be perceived — thereby opening up possibilities to reimagine Asia and its connections to globalization.
Author

Ran Ma

Ran Ma is an associate professor at the 'Japan-in-Asia' Cultural Studies Program, Graduate School of Humanities, Nagoya University, Japan. She has contributed chapters to Chinese Film Festivals: Sites of Translation (2017) and the upcoming anthology The Japanese Cinema Book.