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Urban horror : neoliberal post-socialism and the limits of visibility

Title
Urban horror : neoliberal post-socialism and the limits of visibility / Erin Y. Huang.
ISBN
1478009101
9781478009108
147800679X
1478008091
9781478006794
9781478008095
Publication
Durham : Duke University Press, 2020.
Physical Description
1 online resource (xii, 271 pages) : illustrations
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Extensive and substantial revision of author's thesis (doctoral)--University of California, Irvine, 2012, titled Capital's abjects : Chinese cinemas, urban horror, and the limits of visibility.
Description based on print version record.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
"Urban Horror offers a theory of neoliberal post-socialism through an examination of Chinese cinema. According to Erin Huang, neoliberal post-socialism is the economic order that succeeded the end of the Cold War, and describes the attempted articulation of geopolitical and economic relations between formerly socialist and non-socialist countries in what Huang terms the era of the 'post' or 'post-X.' Rather than describing the definitive end of an era, 'post-X' proffers a regressive temporal logic that sutures the present to the past and continuously differs the future. Huang sees the proliferation of terms to describe Chinese economics after the 1978 economic reform policies as the symptoms of a geopolitical order that doesn't yet have a properly articulated name. For Huang, this unarticulated political order is nevertheless felt affectively through what she calls 'urban horror,' and it is best accessed through the cinema of the time period, in which hypermediality-when the meaning of the image no longer depends on an externally existing reality-became popular. Drawing on a definition of horror as a historical mode of perception that occurs when a perceived external reality exceeds one's internal frame of comprehension, Huang argues that the excess of feeling that marks horror's presence allows for an 'elusive sensory communicative channel' in which alternative and dissenting political feelings can emerge. Chapter 1 offers a historical study of the factory in cinema, positioning the images of factory ruins in Chinese cinema as an attempt to reinvent a past that never fully existed. Chapter 2 examines urban horror from a post-socialist feminist perspective by examining the films of Shaohong Li. Chapter 3 focuses on urban horror's development as a product of time in post-socialist Chinese documentary films. Chapter 4 focuses on post-1997 Hong Kong cinema that circulates public sentiments about Hong Kong as a place of political and economic exception. Chapter 5 examines the films of Ming-liang Tsai-and the subject of precarity in Tsai's films-in relation to their display in art museums and performance art spaces. This book will be of interest to students and scholars of Sinophone and East Asian studies, film studies, studies of globalization and neoliberalism, political and social theory, affect studies, feminist studies, and Marxist studies"-- Provided by publisher.
Variant and related titles
e-Duke books scholarly collection 2020.
Other formats
Print version: Huang, Erin Y. (Erin Yu-Tien), 1981- Urban horror. Durham : Duke University Press, 2020
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
November 08, 2021
Series
Sinotheory.
Sinotheory
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Introduction. Urban horror : speculative futures of Chinese cinemas
Cartographies of socialism and post-socialism : the factory gate and the threshold of the visible world
Intimate dystopias : post-socialist femininity and the Marxist-feminist interior
The post- as media time : documentary experiments and the rhetoric of ruin gazing
Post-socialism in Hong Kong : zone urbanism and Marxist phenomenology
The ethics of representing precarity : subverting the givenness of this world.
Genre/Form
Electronic books.
Citation

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