Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- A Note on Romanization
- 1 Introduction: #MeToo and the Visual Politics of Transnational Chinese Cinema
- 2 The Look and the Stare: Looked Over and Overlooked in The Truth About Beauty (2014), My Way (2012), and Unfinished (2013)
- 3 The Leer and the Glare: Voyeurism and State Surveillance in Hooligan Sparrow (2016) and Angels Wear White (2017)
- 4 A Glimpse of the Glance: Women Scrutinize Men in Female Directors (2012) and Girls Always Happy (2018)
- 5 The Queer Gaze across the Gay-Straight Generational Divide: Small Talk (2016) and A Dog Barking at the Moon (2019)
- 6 The Alienated Gaze and the Activist Eye: Gender, Class, and Politics in Lotus (2012) and Outcry and Whisper (2020)
- 7 Oppositional Optics: The View from Hong Kong
- 8 From Activism to Exile: Our Youth in Taiwan (2018) and To Singapore, with Love (2013)
- 9 Viral Visions: The Pandemic Archive in Miasma, Plants, Export Paintings (2017) and Many Undulating Things (2019)
- 10 Conclusion: The View from the Chinese Diaspora in The Farewell (2019)
- Bilingual Filmography
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - The Look and the Stare: Looked Over and Overlooked in The Truth About Beauty (2014), My Way (2012), and Unfinished (2013)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- A Note on Romanization
- 1 Introduction: #MeToo and the Visual Politics of Transnational Chinese Cinema
- 2 The Look and the Stare: Looked Over and Overlooked in The Truth About Beauty (2014), My Way (2012), and Unfinished (2013)
- 3 The Leer and the Glare: Voyeurism and State Surveillance in Hooligan Sparrow (2016) and Angels Wear White (2017)
- 4 A Glimpse of the Glance: Women Scrutinize Men in Female Directors (2012) and Girls Always Happy (2018)
- 5 The Queer Gaze across the Gay-Straight Generational Divide: Small Talk (2016) and A Dog Barking at the Moon (2019)
- 6 The Alienated Gaze and the Activist Eye: Gender, Class, and Politics in Lotus (2012) and Outcry and Whisper (2020)
- 7 Oppositional Optics: The View from Hong Kong
- 8 From Activism to Exile: Our Youth in Taiwan (2018) and To Singapore, with Love (2013)
- 9 Viral Visions: The Pandemic Archive in Miasma, Plants, Export Paintings (2017) and Many Undulating Things (2019)
- 10 Conclusion: The View from the Chinese Diaspora in The Farewell (2019)
- Bilingual Filmography
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Abstract: How Chinese women should look on screen in the wake of dramatic changes regarding fashion and consumerism in the post-Mao era continues to be a question for directors working within and outside of mainland China. Hong Kong director Aubrey Lam’s The Truth About Beauty (2014), set in Beijing, brings a critical eye to pressures on mainland women navigating through competing demands of career, romance, family, and, of course, ideal femininity. Ann Hui’s short film, My Way (2012), and Siufung Law’s Unfinished (2013), both set in Hong Kong, posit an entirely different set of questions about the look as seen within the context of the city’s transgender communities.
Keywords: Leftover women; China Dream; transgender; gender fluid; female masculinity; neoliberalism
In China on Screen, Chris Berry and Mary Ann Farquhar ask, “How Should a Chinese Woman Look?” (2006: 108–134). They tackle this question by analyzing key performances by female film stars Ruan Lingyu, Xie Fang, Gong Li, and Maggie Cheung in order to interrogate the ways in which nationalism, modernity, and gender intertwine historically, specifically in the Republican era, the Mao era, the Reform Era, and, finally, the years leading up to the Handover of Hong Kong in 1997. Maggie Cheung’s performance of Ruan Lingyu in Hong Kong director Stanley Kwan’s Center Stage (1991) brings these various looks full circle with a nostalgic return to a view of Chinese femininity that connects Shanghai before 1949 to Hong Kong before 1997. Ruan Lingyu and Maggie Cheung playing the silent film actress both wear distinctive qipao (cheongsam), a high-collared, form-fitting garment with side slits appropriated by women from male attire in the early twentieth century.
As the PRC moved into the twenty-first century, female director Xiao Jiang drew on Ruan Lingyu’s contemporary, Zhou Xuan, known for 1930s classics such as Street Angel (1937), as the fashion inspiration for characters living during and emerging from the Mao era in her film Electric Shadows (2004). In a different context, Asian American experimental filmmaker Michelle Sui cites Street Angel as a transnational, trans-historical bridge that uses Shanghai style to connect women across continents. Employing the iconic score from the 1937 feature as the soundtrack in a 2020 short film using the same title, Sui’s camera follows her vibrant-red-cheongsamclad figure through the streets of Los Angeles’ Chinatown.
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- Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2023