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
5 - The Queer Gaze across the Gay-Straight Generational Divide: Small Talk (2016) and A Dog Barking at the Moon (2019)
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: Huang Hui-chen’s documentary Small Talk (2016) and Lisa Zi Xiang’s fiction feature A Dog Barking at the Moon (2019) explore women’s sexuality from the points of view of adult heterosexual daughters of lesbian mothers. These films provide a glimpse beyond compulsory heterosexuality and motherhood in mainland China and Taiwan by reflecting on how daughters look at their lesbian mothers and the reciprocal quality of the gaze across the gay-straight divide. Through a comparison of these two films, the nuances of queer regimes of visualizing sexuality within the family come to the surface in the distinct geopolitical contexts of mainland China and Taiwan.
Keywords: Compulsory heterosexuality; female masculinity; lala; maternal gaze; surrealism
Female Directors and Girls Always Happy highlight aspects of the cinematic gaze that resonate with the global #MeToo moment as well as with other features of contemporary visualizations of gender in Chinese cinema. The power differential between teachers and students in higher education, the monetization of female sexuality, the routine acceptance of sexual exploitation in the film industry, the push-and-pull of camaraderie and competition among women in their personal and professional lives, and the pressures placed on women within the family to fulfill idealized roles assigned to mothers and daughters emerge as key themes in Yang’s Beijing-set films as well as other films from the PRC, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and throughout the diaspora. In the wake of #MeToo, female sexuality on screen steers between demands for the recognition of erotic desires and the critique of voyeuristic exploitation of female bodies for economic gain.
Set against the backdrop of higher education, The Ghost of Sister Ping (2017), a multi-screen video installation by Hong Kong-based scholar and media artist Katrien Jacobs, shares some similarities to Yang Mingming’s stories about young women at the periphery of the vision of the men they desire. Taking up the story of a female academic romantically entangled with a more established university professor, the installation chronicles the psychological disintegration of Sister Ping (Sandy Liu Ho Nam), whose bi-sexual boyfriend leaves her abruptly for a male lover. Jacobs collaborated with mainland Chinese LGBTQ+ activist and filmmaker Fan Popo to create some of the homoerotic sex scenes in the installation.
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- Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2023