feed icon rss

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
Type of Medium
Language
Region
Years
Person/Organisation
Keywords
Access
  • 1
    UID:
    b3kat_BV048704038
    Format: 253 S.
    Content: Cultural Performance in China: beyond resistance in the 1990s adopts a multi-disciplinary and critical approach in engaging issues of cultural performance, global/local cultural subjectivities, and transnationalism within and between different media, including film, television, drama, fiction, and folk dance in China during the late 1990s. Theories of globalization and transnationalism, key to the dissertation's theoretical framework, are in part developed from the works of Arjun Appadurai, Homi Bhabha, Rob Wilson, and Wimal Dissanayake. Theories of performativity and performance, adapted from a range of scholars (including Victor Turner, Richard Schechner, and Judith Butler), show how performance is an apt metaphor for cultural production in the 1990s as cultural bipolarities (e.g., local/global; official/anti-official; socialism/capitalism) are obscured by cultural hybridity. The introduction, through a discussion of Li Yang's feature film Blind Shaft, details my rationale and goals for applying performance theory to cultural production in China. Chapter 2 "Staged Ethnography in Guo Shixing's Birdman and Bad Talk Street" discusses how Guo's staging of ethnographic practices and cultural (re)presentation reveals the hybridity inscribed within a post-colonial discursive practice. Chapter 3 "The Re-cycling of Yang'ge by Senior Citizen Street Performers" illustrates how an urbanized folk dance performance provides the opportunity for individuals in a social sub-group to assert their subjectivities in a process involving imagined and real individual and social transformation. Chapter 4 "Titanic in China: Transnational Capitalism as Official Ideology?" examines the emerging synergies between commercial and official cultural practices and discourses and suggests that such complicity between official discourse, global commodification of culture, and the traffic of transnational capitalism plays a critical role in China's contemporary cultural production ...
    Note: Columbus, Ohio State Univ., East Asian Languages and Literatures, Diss., 2003
    Language: German
    Keywords: Hochschulschrift
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. Further information can be found on the KOBV privacy pages