The inside story of the U.S.-Chinese superpower conflict playing out behind the scenes of today's movie industry, from the leading media scholar
China surpassed North America to become the world 's largest movie market in 2020. Formerly the focus of exotic fascination in the golden age of Hollywood, today the Chinese are a make-or-break audience for Hollywood's biggest blockbusters. And movies are now an essential part of China's global soft power strategy: a Chinese real estate tycoon, who until recently was the major shareholder of the AMC theater chain, built the world's largest film production facility. Behind the curtains, as this brilliant new book reveals, movies have become one of the biggest areas of competition between the world's two remaining superpowers.
Will Hollywood be eclipsed by its Chinese counterpart? No author is better positioned to untangle this riddle than Ying Zhu, a leading expert on Chinese film and media. In fascinating vignettes, Hollywood in China unravels the century-long relationship between Hollywood and China for the first time.
Blending cultural history, business, and international relations, Hollywood in China charts multiple power dynamics and teases out how competing political and economic interests as well as cultural values are manifested in the art and artifice of filmmaking on a global scale, and with global ramifications. The book is an inside look at the intense business and political maneuvering that is shaping the movies and the U.S.-China relationship itself-revealing a headlines-grabbing conflict that is playing out not only on the high seas, but on the silver screen.
Ying Zhu is the founder and chief editor of the peer-reviewed academic journal Global Storytelling: Journal of Digital and Moving Images. The recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities, she is the author of four books including Hollywood in China: Behind the Scenes of the World's Largest Movie Market and Two Billion Eyes: The Story of China Central Television (both from The New Press) and co-editor of six books including Soft Power with Chinese Characteristics: China's Campaign for Hearts and Minds. Previously on the faculty at the City University of New York, she is now a professor in the Academy of Film at the Hong Kong Baptist University and an adjunct professor in the School of Arts at the Columbia University.
Title: Hollywood in China: Behind the Scenes of the World�s Largest Movie Market
Author: Zhu, Ying
ISBN: 9781620972182
Binding:
Publisher: The New Press
Publication Date: 2022-08-25
Number of Pages: 384
Weight: 0.6582 kg
Praise for Hollywood in China:
An able chronicle of the deep, tumultuous relationship between Hollywood and Chinese cinema.
-Kirkus Reviews
Researchers of film history, Chinese media and popular-culture studies, and China-U.S. business relations will find this densely written book both useful for consultation and fascinating for its study of the historical influence of Hollywood on China and vice versa.
-Booklist
Hard to imagine a more necessary book on the movie business than Ying Zhu's twinned account of the Chinese and American film industries. Hollywood in China is scholarly, lucid, and intriguing-as well as a fresh slant on Sino-U.S. relations.
-J. Hoberman, author of The Red Atlantis
Ying Zhu's new book on the Hollywood-China connection . . . reveals, in often fascinating detail, the unexpected parallels between the two industries at various stages of development, showing how such hot-button topics as competition, censorship, and Chinese sensitivities to their treatment in Hollywood films predate the Communist period, and have been there almost from the beginning.
-Stanley Rosen, professor of political science and international relations, USC U.S.-China Institute
Ying Zhu provides the historical depth and analytic acumen required to comprehend the thorny connection Hollywood maintains with China's vast movie market and complex film production industry. Hollywood in China tells the epic story of this motion picture courtship from the Republican Era to China's post-Mao opening to world commerce, and it shows how this movie marriage endures rumblings of divorce from the Cold War, trade war, and other threats of pandemic proportions.
-Gina Marchetti, professor of comparative literature, University of Hong Kong, and author of Citing China
In Hollywood in China, Ying Zhu continues her stunning in-depth analysis of the contemporary Chinese media industries. Her astute focus here is on China's century-long interplay with Hollywood, as the Chinese film industry matches and ultimately surpasses Hollywood on the home front, and threatens to surpass it in the global movie marketplace as well.
-Thomas G. Schatz, professor emeritus, University of Texas at Austin