資料來源: Google Book
Dream factories of a former colony :American fantasies, Philippine cinema
- 作者: Capino, José B.
- 出版: Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press c2010.
- 稽核項: xxxiii, 290 p. :ill. ;23 cm.
- 標題: Motion pictures , Motion pictures and transnationalism. , Culture in motion pictures. , Motion pictures and globalization. , Philippines , Philippines Civilization -- American influences. , Imperialism in motion pictures. , United States , Myth in motion pictures. , Motion pictures Philippines. , In motion pictures. , United States In motion pictures. , National characteristics, American, in motion pictures. , CivilizationAmerican influences.
- ISBN: 0816669724 , 9780816669721
- 附註: 102年國科會補助人文及社會科學研究圖書設備計畫主題:藝術學:華語電影研究. Includes bibliographical references and index. Includes filmography. Introduction : a tale of two sisters -- Visions of empire. Terror is a man : exploiting the horrors of empire -- My brother is not a pig : American benevolence and Philippine sovereignty -- (Not) searching for my father : GI babies and postcolonial futures -- Mobile imaginaries. The migrant woman's tale : on loving and leaving nations -- Filipino American dreams : the cultural politics of diasporan films -- Global ambitions. Naked brown brothers exhibitionism and festival cinema -- Philippine cinema's fatal attractions appropriating Hollywood -- Coda : a tale of two brothers.
- 系統號: 005255960
- 資料類型: 圖書
- 讀者標籤: 需登入
- 引用網址: 複製連結
Philippine cinema, the dream factory of the former U.S. colony, teems with American figures and plots. Local movies feature GIs seeking Filipina brides, cold war spies hunting down native warlords, and American-born Filipinos wandering in the parental homeland. The American landscape furnishes the settings for the triumphs and tragedies of Filipino nurses, GI babies, and migrant workers. By tracking American fantasies in Philippine movies from the postindependence period to the present, Jos� B. Capino offers an innovative account of cinema's cultural work in decolonization and globalization. Capino examines how a third world nation's daydreams both articulate empire and mobilize against it, provide imaginary maps and fables of identity for its migrant workers and diasporan subjects, pose challenges to the alibis of patriarchy and nationalism, and open up paths for participating in the cultures of globality. Through close readings of more than twenty Philippine movies, Capino demonstrates the postcolonial imagination's vital role in generating pragmatic and utopian visions of living with empire. Illuminating an important but understudied cinema, he creates a model for understanding the U.S. image in the third world.
來源: Google Book
來源: Google Book
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