ABSTRACT

This book offers an interdisciplinary, historically grounded study of Asian cinemas’ complex responses to the Cold War conflict.  It situates the global ideological rivalry within regional and local political, social, and cultural processes, while offering a transnational and cross-regional focus.

This volume makes a major contribution to constructing a cultural and popular cinema history of the global Cold War. Its geographical focus is set on East Asia, Southeast Asia, and South Asia. In adopting such an inclusive approach, it draws attention to the different manifestations and meanings of the connections between the Cold War and cinema across Asian borders. Many essays in the volume have a transnational and cross-regional focus, one that sheds light on Cold War-influenced networks (such as the circulation of socialist films across communist countries) and on the efforts of American agencies (such as the United States Information Service and the Asia Foundation) to establish a transregional infrastructure of "free cinema" to contain the communist influences in Asia.

With its interdisciplinary orientation and broad geographical focus, the book will appeal to scholars and students from a wide variety of fields, including film studies, history (especially the burgeoning field of cultural Cold War studies), Asian studies, and US-Asian cultural relations.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

Transnational Connections

chapter 1|26 pages

Art in Propaganda

The Poetics and Politics of Vietnamese Revolutionary Cinema

chapter 2|18 pages

Incomplete Pictures

Mediated Immediacy in the South Korean Newsreel, The Frontline in Vietnam

chapter 3|20 pages

Gained in Translation

The Reception of Foreign Films in Cold War China

chapter 4|20 pages

Contested Chineseness and Third Sister Liu in Singapore and Hong Kong

Folk Songs, Landscape, and Cold War Politics in Asia

part II|2 pages

Global Conflicts, Local Formations

chapter 5|24 pages

Educational Films in Postwar Japan

Traces of American Cultural Policies in the Cold War Period

chapter 7|19 pages

Vehicles of Modernity

Gender, Mobility and Music in Evan Yang’s MP&GI films

chapter 8|16 pages

Socks and Revolution

The Politics of Consumption in Sentinels under the Neon Lights (1964)

chapter 9|20 pages

Archive Revisionisms

Reevaluating South Korea’s State Film Censorship of the Cold War Era

chapter 10|20 pages

Indian Cinema, Indian Democracy

An Unusual Cold War Saga, 1947–89

part III|2 pages

Struggle for Hearts and Minds

chapter 11|21 pages

Tropical Cold War Horror

Penumpasan Pengkhianatan G30S/PKI and the Traumatized Culture of Suharto’s New Order

chapter 12|25 pages

Entertainment and Propaganda

Hong Kong Cinema and Asia’s Cold War

chapter 13|21 pages

The End of an Era

The Cultural Revolution, Modernization, and the Demise of Hong Kong Leftist Cinema

chapter 14|21 pages

Who Views Whom through Whose Lenses?

The Gazes in USIS Film Propaganda in South Korea