The post-urban gaze and Hong Kong independent cinema: An ecofeminist perspective

IF 0.3 0 FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION Asian Cinema Pub Date : 2019-10-01 DOI:10.1386/ac_00005_1
Winnie L. M. Yee
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Abstract

The city has always been a prominent subject in Hong Kong cinema. Land has been seen only as a profitable commodity, controlled by property developers and the wealthy. Instead of exploring the countryside and the traditional farming and fishing villages, people shifted their focus to Hong Kong: its skyline became the only valid point of perception. This marginalization of nature, however, was challenged in 2008 during the dispute between the villagers of Choi Yuen village and the Hong Kong government regarding the construction of Guangzhou‐Hong Kong High-Speed Rail Link, which would demolish the village of 500 people that lay along its path. This article looks at Jessey Tsang’s documentary Flowing Stories (2014) and adopts an ecofeminist perspective on the ways in which Hong Kong’s cultural imaginary has been reinvented in films. The role of documentaries in the independent film scene will be reviewed, especially the social-issue documentaries that have become popular since 2008. An ecofeminist approach to our understanding of Hong Kong could shift the paradigm of our stagnant cultural imaginary ‐ the urban city ‐ and resituate Hong Kong in a closer connection with its surroundings and the world.
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后城市凝视与香港独立电影:生态女性主义视角
这座城市一直是香港电影的一个突出主题。土地一直被视为一种有利可图的商品,由房地产开发商和富人控制。人们不再探索乡村和传统的农业和渔业村庄,而是将注意力转移到香港:它的天际线成为唯一有效的感知点。然而,2008年,在菜园村村民与香港政府就修建广州-香港高速铁路发生争议时,这种对自然的边缘化受到了挑战,该铁路将摧毁沿途500人的村庄。本文着眼于曾(Jessey Tsang)的纪录片《流动的故事》(Flow Stories,2014),从生态女性主义的角度探讨香港的文化想象在电影中被重新塑造的方式。将回顾纪录片在独立电影界的作用,特别是自2008年以来流行的社会问题纪录片。我们理解香港的生态女权主义方法可以改变我们停滞的文化想象——城市——的范式,并使香港与周围环境和世界建立更紧密的联系。
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来源期刊
Asian Cinema
Asian Cinema FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
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