ABSTRACT

Critical theory and popular wisdom are rife with images of surveillance as an intrusive, repressive practice often suggestively attributed to eastern powers and opposed to western liberalism. Hollywood-dominated global media has long promulgated a geopoliticized east-west axis of freedom vs. control. This book focuses on Asian and Asia-based films and cinematic traditions obscured by lopsided western hegemonic discourse and—more specifically—probes these films’ treatments of a phenomenon that western film often portrays with neo-orientalist hysteria. Exploring recent and historical movies made in post-social and anti-Communist societies such as China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Vietnam and South Korea, the book picks up on the political and economic concerns implicitly underlying Sinophobic and anti-Communist Asian images in Hollywood films while also considering how these societies and states depict the issues of centralization, militarization and technological innovation so often figured as distinctive of the difference between eastern despotism and western liberalism.

chapter Introduction|10 pages

Asian Cinema and the Surveillance Archipelago

part I|76 pages

Cold War

chapter 1|20 pages

The Might of the People

Counter-Espionage Films and Participatory Surveillance in the Early PRC

chapter 2|27 pages

Closely Watched Films

Surveillance and Postwar Hong Kong Leftist Cinema

part II|89 pages

Market Reform

chapter 4|24 pages

Under Western Eyes?

Colonial Bureaucracy, Surveillance, and the Birth of the Hong Kong Crime Film

part III|92 pages

Global Capital

chapter 8|24 pages

Dividuated Korean Cinema

Recent Body Switch Films in the Overwired Age

chapter 9|23 pages

Implication through Dissociation

Cinematic Enactment Tactics of State Surveillance in Cold Eyes

chapter 11|24 pages

Discreet Camera-Eye, Spectacle, and Stranger Sociality

On the Shift to Prosumer Digital Surveillance in China