Scarecrow Press
Pages: 508
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-8108-6792-5 • Hardback • November 2012 • $218.00 • (£169.00)
978-0-8108-7922-5 • eBook • November 2012 • $207.00 • (£162.00)
Daw-Ming Lee is an award-winning filmmaker having directed The Suona Player and produced A Drifting Life and produced or directed nine feature-length documentaries and nearly 150 television documentary programs. He helped to establish the Graduate Institute of Filmmaking, the Graduate Institute of Arts and Technology, and the Department of Animation at Taipei National University of the Arts in Taiwan, where he is associate professor in the Department of Filmmaking and the Department of Animation. He has (co)curated a Taipei Golden Horse International Film Festival and Crossing Waves: Documenting Taiwan in the 1990s. He has (co)edited four film books in Chinese and written numerous articles on film in a variety of journals in Taiwan and the West. He is a member of the editorial board of Studies in Documentary Film.
The Historical Dictionary of Taiwan Cinema includes a chronology, list of acronyms and abbreviations, introduction, dictionary, and a topical bibliography. The Dictionary offers reliable counts of the country's film history with cross-references of the important directors, producers, performers, films, studios, and genres. The author is an award-winning filmmaker and film scholar as well as associate professor in the Department of Filmmaking and at Taipei National University of the Arts in Taiwan. The films are discussed are analyzed with thoughtful perspectives. This Dictionary offers a good starting point for readers to understand Taiwan's rich motion picture history. This work is recommended for libraries with a collection of East Asia studies.
— American Reference Books Annual
Taiwan cinema has been intertwined historically and politically with that of China, Hong Kong, and Japan for over a century. Academic and film historian Lee (Taipei National Univ. of the Arts in Taiwan) focuses on Taiwan cinema during two divided periods of Taiwan history: Japanese colonial rule (1895-1945) and Nationalist rule (1945-present). This well-researched book features an excellent and informative introductory essay, a reader's note, a list of acronyms and abbreviations, a detailed chronology (1895-2011), more than 140 entries, an extensive bibliography, maps, and photographs. In the reader's note, Lee explains the complex Romanization systems used throughout the volume, including Cantonese, English, Pinyin, and Wade-Giles for Chinese names, and modified Hepburn for Japanese names. The main dictionary entries feature prominent directors, producers, actors, studios, organizations, genres, and representatives of the best Taiwanese films. Overall, this is a useful resource for students and scholars in film or East Asian studies. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through researchers.
— Choice Reviews