ID | 079930 |
Title Proper | Screening Disability in the PRC |
Other Title Information | the politics of looking good |
Language | ENG |
Author | Dauncey, Sarah |
Publication | 2007. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article outlines the political, social, economic, and cultural factors affecting disability representation in Chinese cinema from the founding of the PRC onwards, particularly after 1976. With reference to a wide variety of films that include main characters with visual, hearing, speech, physical, and learning impairments, it demonstrates how socialist realism, the equation of a "healthy" body with a healthy nation, and the great economic endeavor of the Mao era all contributed to the limitation of disabled people on the big screen, whilst the opening-up reforms, spiritual civilization campaigns, and commercial and critical demands of the post-Mao era effectively promoted their inclusion. At different times, the marginality of disabled people has resulted in them being overlooked as irrelevant, rejected as impaired, employed as a political tool, or identified as a marketable commodity. The representation or nonrepresentation of disability in Chinese film is closely linked to the politics of looking good |
`In' analytical Note | China Information Vol. 21, No.3; Nov 2007: p481-506 |
Journal Source | China Information Vol. 21, No.3; Nov 2007: p481-506 |
Key Words | Disability ; Film ; Marginality ; Socialist Realism ; Spiritual Civilization ; Marketability |