Document details

Ethnic Minority Cinema in China’s Nation-State Building

Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press (2025), xiii, 285 pp.

Contains figures, bibliogr. pp. 257-274, index

Series: China Understandings Today

ISBN 978-0-472-05727-6 (pbk); 978-0-472-90488-4 (ebook)

CC BY-NC

"Ethnic Minority Cinema in China's Nation-State Building investigates the convoluted relations between the cinematic productions about non-Han ethnic minorities and China's nation-state building project from the early Republican era of the 1920s to the current authoritarian regime in the twenty-first century. The glossy, but superficial, cinematic depictions of non-Han ethnic minorities manufactured and manipulated by state authorities have deeply penetrated the Chinese psyche of what an ideal multiethnic nation should be like, with these visuals changing what it means to be Chinese under political unification. Kwai-Cheung Lo understands these ethnic minorities as part of a larger ecosystem and alludes to the cultures, values, and life practices of non-Han ethnic minorities as closely entwined with environmental issues and politics. This intertwining, Lo argues, suggests a crisis in "objectification and identification" of both people and the environment, that plays out in cinema featuring ethnic minorities. Lo traces these representations of Chinese ethnic minority groups in films created by both members of the Han-majority and non-Han filmmakers, examining how these representations became a site in which state authorities, Han and non-Han communities, and foreign agencies compete and interact under the larger context of building and imagining the Chinese nation-state. " (Publisher description)
Introduction: Ethnic Minority Ecosystem in the Formation of Modern China, 1
1 Cinematicity, Ethnic Gestures, and Republican China’s Rescue Mission, 27
2 Hearing Like a State: Revolutionary Voice, Musical, and the Making of (Hetero-) Utopia in the Socialist China of the 1950s and 1960s, 63
3 What Came after Chinggis Khan: The Steppe Reimagined in Ecological Politics, 97
4 Ecology of Fear: Cinematic Surveillance and Biopolitical Governance of Islam, 133
5 The Fourteenth Dalai Lama Is Not the Message: Depicting Life beyond Spirituality in Tibet Cinema, 171
6 Transnational Ethnic Filmmaking as Cultural Ecology, 209
Epilogue: A Global Theory of Ethnic Minority Cinema from China? 235