Ann Hui's Song of the ExileHong Kong University Press, 1 мар. 2010 г. - Всего страниц: 142 The resolutely independent filmmaker Ann On-wah Hui continues to inspire critical acclaim for her sensitive portrayals of numerous Hong Kong tragedies and marginalized populations. In a pioneering career spanning three decades, Hui has been director, producer, writer and actress for more than 30 films. In this work, Audrey Yue analyses a 1990 film considered by many to be one of Hui's most haunting and poignant works, Song of the Exile. The semi-autobiographical film depicts a daughter's coming to terms with her mother's Japanese identity. Themes of cross-cultural alienation, divided loyalties and generational reconciliation resonate strongly amid the migration and displacement pressures surrounding Hong Kong in the early 1990s. Even now, more than a decade after the 1997 Handover, the film is a perennial favourite among returning Hong Kong emigrants and international cinema students. This book examines how Hui challenges the myth of the original home as singular, familial and romantic, and constructs the second home as a new space for Hong Kong modernity. Yue also discusses the teaching of the film in the diaspora, demonstrating its potential as an affective and performative text of transcultural literacy and diasporic negotiations in the cross-cultural classroom. |
Содержание
1 | |
7 | |
Authorship Memory Intimate
Biography | 49 |
Minor Cinema Transcultural Literacy and Border Pedagogy | 89 |
Notes | 124 |
Awards and Nominations | 128 |
Ann Huis Filmography | 129 |
Bibliography | 133 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Aiko Aiko’s Ann Hui articulate Asian Cinema border pedagogy Britain Cantonese challenge Chan Cheung China Chinese cinema Chow colonial conflict consider construct critical media literacy critical pedagogy Cultural Studies decentred defined diasporic inheritance diasporic intimacy discourse dominant edited ethical self—fashioning ethnic excentric Exile experience family home field film film’s first flashback frame gender genre global grandparents Guangzhou highlight homecoming homeland Hong Kong cinema Hong Kong diaspora Hong Kong film Hong Kong modernity Hueyin identity Jackie Chan Japan Japanese John Woo Kong’s Mabel Cheung Macau Maggie Cheung Manchuria maternal melodrama melodrama memory migration minor cinema mode mother and daughter motif multicultural narrative of re—turn neoliberal nostalgia official ontology patriarchal political postcolonial feminist postcolonial feminist autobiography protagonists realism reconciliation reflects relationship representations reunification Routledge second home sequence shot shows significant social Song space specific Stanley Kwan transcultural literacy transformation transnational University Press women women’s cinema Wong