Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/7286
Title: Cinema, Colonialism, and Contact Zone: The Movie Theater and City Governance in Early-Twentieth-Century Shanghai
Authors: Prof. HE Qiliang 
Tan, Jie 
Issue Date: 2023
Source: International Journal of Asian Studies, 2023, Vol. 20(2), pp. 591-609.
Journal: International Journal of Asian Studies 
Abstract: Moving away from the text-centered paradigm in film studies, the present research explores the relationship between the growing popularity of the film in Shanghai during the first two decades of the twentieth century and city governance in the International Settlement. It argues that the rise of movie halls contributed to creating a new kind of crowd that blended Chinese moviegoers with non-Chinese viewers. The emergence of the cinema as a space where people of different racial and ethnic origins encountered impelled the Shanghai Municipal Council – the governing body of the International Settlement in Shanghai – to respond by implementing new measures of public safety and altering its decades-long unspoken rules of segregation in the realm of everyday life. For Chinese enlightenment intellectuals and government officials, meanwhile, anxiety over their fellow Chinese's lack of basic decorum in public spaces arose with the intense intermingling of Chinese and non-Chinese filmgoers under the same roof. Thus, the cinema became a “contact zone” – a space of asymmetrical relations resulting not necessarily from colonists' exercise of colonial power but from the Chinese elite's wrapping of the discussion of movie theater etiquette reform within a political and ideological framework of modernization, patriotism, and anti-imperialism.
Type: Peer Reviewed Journal Article
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/7286
ISSN: 14795914
DOI: 10.1017/S1479591421000346
Appears in Collections:History - Publication

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