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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/7289
Title: | From Wu Xun to Lu Xun: Film, Stardom, and Subjectivity in Mao’s China (1949–1976) |
Authors: | Prof. HE Qiliang Wang, Meng |
Issue Date: | 2022 |
Source: | Modern China, 2022, vol. 48(3), pp. 650–675. |
Journal: | Modern China |
Abstract: | This article focuses on Zhao Dan’s (1915–1980) career in film after 1949 to investigate a specific type of stardom unique to Mao Zedong’s China (1949–1976). We argue that this new stardom was similar to what conventionally defines stardom, but with an added political dimension: Zhao Dan’s acquisition of high political standing in the People’s Republic of China (PRC). To arrive at a fuller understanding of the state–artist relationship in the PRC, this article challenges the paradigm of accommodation and resistance between the tyrannical state and subordinated artists, which presupposes a subjectivity or selfhood on the part of artists that pre-existed and was maintained against the intrusive hegemonic ideologies of the state. Instead, we underscore that the making of Zhao Dan’s subjectivity in the PRC—his subjectivity-in-stardom in this case—was a dynamic process, a “becoming.” Zhao Dan’s checkered career indicates that he not only acclimated himself to the ever-changing political atmosphere of Mao-era China but also sought to benefit from it. |
Type: | Peer Reviewed Journal Article |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/7289 |
DOI: | 10.1177/00977004211002752 |
Appears in Collections: | History - Publication |
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