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Victims, Perpetrators and Professionals

The Representation of Women in Chinese Crime Films

by Tingting Hu

Type
Studies
Subject
CountriesChina
Keywords
China, crime films, women, representation
Publishing date
2021
Publisher
Liverpool University Press
Collection
Liverpool Library of Asian & Asian American Studies
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Hardcover • 180 pages
6 ½ x 9 ½ inches (16.5 x 24 cm)
ISBN
978-1-78976-092-7
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Book Presentation:
Victims, Perpetrators and Professionals; examines the representation of women in relation to violence in Chinese crime films made on the mainland, and in Hong Kong and Taiwan. It introduces a new trajectory in the investigation of the cinematic representation of female figures in relation to gender issues by interweaving Western feminist and postfeminist critiques with traditional Chinese sociocultural discourse. An in-depth narrative identifies three major representations of women: the female victim, the female perpetrator of violence, and the female professional. Salience to contemporary society shows up in many ways, passive and active, all of which reinforce a sense of male dominance and patriarchal power. Analysis bridges the gap in the field of female representation in Chinese culture/Chinese film studies by systematically examining Chinese crime films as a genre in its own right. The depiction of female victimisation at the hands of men in the selected crime films consolidates the notion of women's vulnerability and inferiority as perceived in Chinese gender discourse. On the other hand, the representation of active female perpetrators of violence, and as professional working women, presents what may be seen as a postfeminist masquerade—a cultural strategy that shows an ostensible impression of female empowerment albeit that it reinforces traditional gender hierarchies in the Chinese gender context. While graphic female victimisation is commonly presented, female perpetrators of violence and females in professional roles in crime films are shown to remain under the control of male authority, leading to the conclusion that Chinese crime films are produced in a context of heavy patriarchal power and misogyny.

About the Author:
Tingting Hu is a Research Fellow in School of Journalism and Communication, Wuhan University, China. She received her PhD at Macquarie University, Australia. Her research interest lies in the articulation of film, media, and cultural studies with feminist theories, and transmedia studies in various socio-cultural contexts. Her recent publications appear in the Journal of Contemporary China, Television & New Media, Continuum, and Feminist Media Studies.

See the publisher website: Liverpool University Press

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