Extraterritoriality
豆瓣
Locating Hong Kong Cinema and Media
Victor Fan
简介
Actively rewrites and reconfigures how Hong Kong cinema and media are to be defined and located
Examining how Hong Kong filmmakers, spectators and critics wrestled with this perturbation between the Leftist Riots (1967) and the aftermath of the Umbrella Movement (2014), this book traces how Hong Kong’s extraterritoriality has been framed: in its position of being doubly occupied and doubly abandoned by contesting juridical, political, linguistic and cultural forces.
Extraterritoriality scrutinises creative works in mainstream cinema, independent films, television, video artworks and documentaries – especially those by marginalised artists – actively rewriting and reconfiguring how Hong Kong cinema and media are to be defined and located.
Key features
Proposes extraterritoriality as a key theoretical concept
Forms a dialogue with Postcolonial Studies and Sinophone Studies
Offers in-depth archival studies of the Hong Kong film industry, television and video arts, as well as major political crises in Hong Kong, including the 1967 Riots, the Sino-British negotiation of Hong Kong’s ‘future’, the Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement and the Umbrella Movement
contents
Acknowledgements
Notes on Transliteration
On Extraterritoriality
Chapter 1: What is Hong Kong Cinema?
Chapter 2: Breaking the Wave
Chapter 3: The Time It Takes for Time to End
Chapter 4: Posthistoricity
Chapter 5: The Age of Precarity
The Body of Extraterritoriality
Notes
Filmography and Videography
Index