The Locator -- [(subject = "Culture in motion pictures")]

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Author:
Wan, Marco, author.
Title:
Film and constitutional controversy : visualizing Hong Kong identity in the age of "one country, two systems" / Marco Wan, The University of Hong Kong.
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press,
Copyright Date:
2020
Description:
176 pages ; 26 cm.
Subject:
Wong, Kar-wai,--1958-
Wong, Kar-wai,--1958-
Constitutional law--Hong Kong.--Hong Kong.
Motion pictures--Social aspects--Hong Kong.--Hong Kong.
Group identity--Hong Kong.--Hong Kong.
Law in motion pictures.
Culture in motion pictures.
National characteristics, Chinese.
Constitutional law.
Culture in motion pictures.
Group identity.
Law in motion pictures.
Motion pictures--Social aspects.
National characteristics, Chinese.
China--Hong Kong.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Love in a time of transition : Ng See-Yuen's The unwritten law -- Laughing at the law : Johnnie To's Justice, my foot! -- Women's rights and censorship : Andrew Lau's Raped by an angel -- The common law after 1997 : Joe Ma's Lawyer Lawyer -- A matter of national security : Tammy Cheung's July -- Choosing the leader : chief executive elections and Hong Kong gangster films -- Scenes from a traumatic event : documenting occupy central (with observations on cinema and the anti-extradition bill protests).
Summary:
"In modern-day Hong Kong, major constitutional controversies have caused people to demonstrate on the streets, immigrate to other countries, occupy major thoroughfares, and even engage in violence. These controversies have such great resonance because they put pressure on a cultural identity made possible by, and inseparable from, the 'One Country, Two Systems' framework. Hong Kong is also a city synonymous with film, ranging from commercial gangster movies to the art cinema of Wong Kar-wai. This book argues that while the importance of constitutional controversies for the process of self formation may not be readily discernible in court judgments and legislative enactments, it is registered in the diverse modes of expression found in Hong Kong cinema. It contends that film gives form to the ways in which Hong Kong identity is articulated, placed under stress, bolstered, and transformed in light of disputes about the nature and meaning of the city's constitutional documents"-- Provided by publisher.
Series:
The law in context series
ISBN:
1108797768
9781108797764
110849577X
9781108495776
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1155570318
LCCN:
2020036497
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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