ABSTRACT
This book is about cinema and the cultural Cold War in Asia, set against the larger history of the cultural, political, and institutional linkages between the US, Europe, and Asia at the height of the Cold War. From the popularity of CIA-sponsored espionage films in Hong Kong and South Korea to the enduring Cold War rhetoric of brotherly relations in contemporary Sino-Indian co-production, cinema has always been a focal point of the cultural Cold War in Asia. Historically, both the United States and the Soviet Union viewed cinema as a powerful weapon in the battle to win hearts and minds—not just in Europe, but also in Asia. The Cold War in Asia was, properly speaking, a hot war, with proxy military confrontations between the United States, on one side, and the Soviet Union and China on the other. Amid this political and military turbulence, cataclysmic shifts occurred in the culture and history of Asian cinemas as well as in the latitude of US cultural diplomacy in Asia. The collection of essays in this volume sheds light on the often-forgotten history of the cultural Cold War in Asia. Taken together, the volume’s fifteen chapters examine film cultures and industries in Asia to showcase the magnitude and depth of the Cold War’s impact on Asian cinemas, societies, and politics. By shifting the lens to Asia, the contributors to this volume re-examine the dominant narratives about the global Cold War and highlight the complex and unique ways in which Asian societies negotiated, contested, and adapted to the politics and cultural manifestations of the Cold War.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part One|78 pages
Cinematic Constructions of the Cold War in Asia
chapter 2|20 pages
Taiwanese-Language Cinema as Cold War Industry and Culture: Compliance without Commitment
chapter 3|21 pages
Landscape, Identity, and War: The Poetic Revolutionary Cinema of North Vietnam
chapter 4|18 pages
Screening the Cold War in Cambodia: The Films of Norodom Sihanouk and Rithy Panh
part Two|93 pages
Cold War Geopolitics in Asian Cinemas
chapter 8|19 pages
Cold War Myth from Elite Democracy to Martial Law in the Genre Cinema of Fernando Poe Jr. in the 1960s and 1970s
chapter 9|17 pages
Silver Screen Reversals of the Domino Theory: American Cold War Movies and the Re-imagining of Britain's Experience in Southeast Asia
chapter 10|17 pages
Ugly Americans and Indeterminate Asians: Strategies/Symptoms of Southeast Asian Representation in Cold War US Film
part Three|71 pages
Cold War Film Genres
chapter 11|18 pages
Counter-Occupying Americanism in South Korea and Taiwan: Taking Back the Spaces of US Base Culture in the Cold War Musical Number
chapter 13|16 pages
Cosmopolitan Kŏjedo: Swing Kids (2018) and Historical Memories of the Korean War
chapter 14|17 pages
Spectacle of Violence and the Beiqing Masculine: Post-War Structure of Feeling in Taiwan Pulp
part Four|40 pages
The Long Shadow of the Cold War in Contemporary Asian Cinemas
