ABSTRACT

Asian cinemas are connected to global networks and participate in producing international film history while at the same time influenced and engaged by spatial, cultural, social and political transformations. This interdisciplinary study forwards a productive pairing of Asian cinemas and space, where space is used as a discursive tool to understand cinemas of Asia.

Concentrating on the performative potential of cinematic space in Asian films, the contributors discuss how space (re)constructs forms of identities and meanings across a range of cinematic practices. Cities, landscapes, buildings and interiors actively shape cinematic performances of such identities and their significances. The essays are structured around the spatial themes of ephemeral, imagined and contested spaces. They deal with struggles for identity, belonging, autonomy and mobility within different national and transnational contexts across East, Southeast and parts of South Asia in particular, which are complicated by micropolitics and subcultures, and by the interventions and interests of global lobbies.

part 1|61 pages

Ephemeral Space

chapter 3|13 pages

Notes from Elsewhere

Spaces of Longing in Trân Anh Hùng's Vertical Ray of the Sun

chapter 4|15 pages

Between Demolition and Construction

Performing Drifting Identities in Jia Zhangke's Films

chapter 5|18 pages

Chasing Inuka

Rambling around Singapore through Tan Pin Pin's Films

part 2|61 pages

Imagined Space

chapter 8|17 pages

Imagining Nanyang

Hong Kong and Southeast Asia in Wong Kar-wai Movies

chapter 9|13 pages

Air Hostess and Atmosphere

The Persistence of the Tableau

part 3|67 pages

Contested Space

chapter 11|16 pages

Performing the Multicultural Space in Opera Jawa

The Tension Between National and Transnational Stages

chapter 12|16 pages

Cinema as Ritual Space

O Meul's Jiseul

chapter 13|17 pages

Counterperformance

The Heartland and Other Spaces in Eating Air and 15