Lexington Books
Pages: 168
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-6782-3 • Hardback • April 2012 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-8815-6 • Paperback • October 2013 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-7535-4 • eBook • April 2012 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Hyon Joo Yoo is assistant professor of film and television studies at the University of Vermont.
Preface
Introduction: What's in a Name? Postcolonial East Asia
Chapter 1. The Other Empire: Japan and the Pornographic Imagination of East Asia
Chapter 2. Can the Subaltern "See"? The Subaltern Vision and Looking Otherwise
Chapter 3. Transnational Cultural Production and the Politics of Moribund Masculinity
Chapter 4. When is it Postcolonial? Time-Space in East Asian National Cinema
Epilogue
Proposing that an individual film can be a synecdoche for imperialism, colonialism, and postcolonialism—primarily in North Korea, South Korea, and Japan—and that individual filmic characters function as a synecdoche for gender and racial issues, Yoo's book is a hybrid, mixing film analysis with commentary on political and social aspects of East Asia. Using Korean, Taiwanese, and Japanese cinemas and a Lacanian theoretical framework, Yoo (Univ. of Vermont) explores the rules surrounding the 'family state,' or gender rules for individual characters; 'state racism,' which 'involves migrant workers, illegal aliens, and disenfranchised natives'; and Japan's claim to modernity versus the rest of Asia as the 'Other' or the unmodern. The films discussed, among them Chun-ho Bong's Memories of Murder (2003) and Mother (2009) and also Hou Hsiao-hsien's Goodbye, South, Goodbye (1996) and Millennium Mambo (2001), offer instances of the Lacanian real and jouissance, which synecdochely depict how the rules for the family state and state racism break down when the subject's gender identity breaks down, or when, in Hou's films, violence and death reveal the violence of the (post)colonial period. Summing Up: Recommended.
— Choice Reviews