
Coproducing Asia
Locating Japanese-Chinese Regional Film and Media
Stephanie DeBoer(Author)
University of Minnesota Press
Published on 1. March 2014
Book
Paperback/Softback
256 pages
978-0-8166-8950-7 (ISBN)
Description
East Asia largely functions as a single film and media market, but behind it exists a multifaceted world of coproduction crossing linguistic and national borders. In Coproducing Asia, Stephanie DeBoer guides readers through a rich genealogy of regional film and media coproduction, all the while introducing innovative methods for their examination across decades, locations, and scales of production in East Asia and beyond.
Beginning with the present and moving back in time, Coproducing Asia paints a picture of the assemblages of coproduction in East Asia and their negotiation of Cold War geopolitics and imperial legacies along with the emergence of China as a global market. Addressing wide-screen international romances of the early 1960s, technology transfers of Cold War action cinema, Sino-Japanese "friendship" TV collaborations, Asian omnibus film and video, and more recent China-centered blockbusters, DeBoer deftly contextualizes each case study while accounting for the difficulties involved in the cultural, creative, and industry mediations associated with coproduction.
Based on rarely seen archival research as well as interviews with producers in Tokyo, Hong Kong, Taipei, and Shanghai, Coproducing Asia provides compelling frames for understanding the significance of film and media coproduction in East Asia, making clear that it is not only a site of technological transformation but also an arena for competing senses of regional location and place.
Beginning with the present and moving back in time, Coproducing Asia paints a picture of the assemblages of coproduction in East Asia and their negotiation of Cold War geopolitics and imperial legacies along with the emergence of China as a global market. Addressing wide-screen international romances of the early 1960s, technology transfers of Cold War action cinema, Sino-Japanese "friendship" TV collaborations, Asian omnibus film and video, and more recent China-centered blockbusters, DeBoer deftly contextualizes each case study while accounting for the difficulties involved in the cultural, creative, and industry mediations associated with coproduction.
Based on rarely seen archival research as well as interviews with producers in Tokyo, Hong Kong, Taipei, and Shanghai, Coproducing Asia provides compelling frames for understanding the significance of film and media coproduction in East Asia, making clear that it is not only a site of technological transformation but also an arena for competing senses of regional location and place.
Reviews / Votes
"Coproducing Asia is a wonderful book that will have genuine and lasting significance. Stephanie DeBoer has produced a nuanced and practical account of the tensions and difficulties involved not only in the too rarely studied creative and business negotiations enabling a co-production, but also in the asymmetrical cultural investments and historical 'hauntings' at stake in such ventures and active in their differing sites of reception. It's a tour de force." -Meaghan Morris, author of Identity Anecdotes: Translation and Media Culture"East Asia functions as a single film market, in many respects, but too few scholars have the acumen to look beyond national borders and linguistic barriers to plumb the depths of this crucial area of inquiry. DeBoer is a welcome exception to the rule." -Gina Marchetti, author of The Chinese Diaspora on American Screens: Race, Sex, and Cinema
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Minnesota
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
19
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 38 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-8166-8950-7 (9780816689507)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Stephanie DeBoer is assistant professor of film and media studies in the Department of Communication and Culture at Indiana University, Bloomington.
Content
Contents
Introduction: Coproduction and the New East Asia
1. The Bright Asian Market Place: Regional Specters of Connection and Desire2. Collaboration Decentered: Technology Transfer and the Hong Kong Copy3. Sino-Japanese Techno-Friendship: Location, Presence, and Memory's Displacement4. Tokyo on the Move: Omnibus Asia, Media Capital, and the Limits of the Link5. Working through China: Scale, Place, and New Asian Coproduction
Conclusion. Scaling the Frame: Genealogies of Coproduction and the Asian Frontier
AcknowledgmentsNotesFilmographyIndex
Introduction: Coproduction and the New East Asia
1. The Bright Asian Market Place: Regional Specters of Connection and Desire2. Collaboration Decentered: Technology Transfer and the Hong Kong Copy3. Sino-Japanese Techno-Friendship: Location, Presence, and Memory's Displacement4. Tokyo on the Move: Omnibus Asia, Media Capital, and the Limits of the Link5. Working through China: Scale, Place, and New Asian Coproduction
Conclusion. Scaling the Frame: Genealogies of Coproduction and the Asian Frontier
AcknowledgmentsNotesFilmographyIndex