資料來源: Google Book
Backward glances :contemporary Chinese cultures and the female homoerotic imaginary
- 作者: Martin, Fran,
- 出版: Durham, NC : Duke University Press 2010.
- 稽核項: xi, 290 p. :ill. ;24 cm.
- 叢書名: Asia-Pacific, culture, politics, and society
- 標題: Popular culture China. , Lesbianism in motion pictures. , Sex in popular culture , Sex in popular culture China. , Popular culture
- ISBN: 082234680X , 9780822346807
- 附註: Includes bibliographical references (p. [259]-279) and index. Includes filmography (p. [255]-257) Tragic romance : the Chinese going-in story -- Voluble ellipsis : second-wave schoolgirl romance in Taiwan and Hong Kong -- Postsocialist melancholia : "Blue sky green sea" -- No future : tomboy melodrama -- Television as public mourning : Taiwan's sad young women -- Critical presentism : new Chinese lesbian cinema.
- 系統號: 005090475
- 資料類型: 圖書
- 讀者標籤: 需登入
- 引用網址: 複製連結
Backward Glances reveals that the passionate love one woman feels for another occupies a position of unsuspected centrality in contemporary Chinese mass cultures. By examining representations of erotic and romantic love between women in popular films, elite and pulp fiction, and television dramas, Fran Martin shows how youthful same-sex love is often framed as a universal, even ennobling, feminine experience. She argues that a temporal logic dominates depictions of female homoeroticism, and she traces that logic across texts produced and consumed in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan during the twentieth century and the early twenty-first. Attentive to both transnational cultural flows and local particularities, Martin shows how loving relations between women in mass culture are usually represented as past experiences. Adult protagonists revel in the repeated, mournful narration of their memories. Yet these portrayals do not simply or finally consign the same-sex loving woman to the past—they also cause her to reappear ceaselessly in the present. As Martin explains, memorial schoolgirl love stories are popular throughout contemporary Chinese cultures. The same-sex attracted young woman appears in both openly homophobic and proudly queer-affirmative narratives, as well as in stories whose ideological valence is less immediately clear. Martin demonstrates that the stories, television programs, and films she analyzes are not idiosyncratic depictions of marginal figures, but manifestations of a broader, mainstream cultural preoccupation. Her investigation of representations of same-sex love between women sheds new light on contemporary Chinese understandings of sex, love, gender, marriage, and the cultural ordering of human life.
來源: Google Book
來源: Google Book
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