彭麗君進行了細緻的研究,引領讀者進入文革的世界,包括各種複製、建構樣板與典範的藝術行為,它們構築了文化和政治領域,然後在社會景觀中被廣泛傳播,以至成為生活時尚。本書建基於無懈可擊的研究,帶來了令人振奮的新見解,絕對是理解中國文化大革命不容錯過的書。—— 杜登教 Michael Dutton(倫敦大學金匠學院政治學教授)
Laikwan Pang teaches cultural studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. She is the author of Building a New Cinema in China: The Chinese Left-wing Cinema Movement, 1932-37 (Rowman and Littlefield, 2004) and Cultural Control and Globalisation in Asia: Copyright, Piracy and Cinema (RoutledgeCurzon, forthcoming).
(copied from the blurb at the back of Masculinities and Hong Kong Cinema)
Brilliant book about the interaction of order and chaos during the cultural revolution. The author analyzes the impossibility of the government's attempt to impose on a society settled patterns of revolutionary identity. She describes how, while copying such patterns, people developed various understandings of these which, eventually, emptied them of meaning. She also describes how the initial intent of eliminating the social differences within society by reversing social roles resulted in destroying the institutions which sustained social order and thus any sort of social security. People reacted to this by emotionally distancing themselves from the revolution. Overall a very interesting analysis on how an attempt to direct a revolution from above could not work and on how extreme politicization could not but depoliticize the society.
Very impressive psychoanalytic/pop theory reading of the actual culture thrown up by the Cultural Revolution - nuanced and sophisticated, but at no point shying away from that movement's immense cruelty.
Top-drawer scholarship. A perpetual flow of insightful analysis of the aesthetics and politics of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, notable for Pang's capacity to transcend the ossified perspective presented to Western readers of exclusively the horrors visited upon the elite during this decade. If you have an open mind or are open to having an open mind, I recommend reading this perspective shifting work.
Love how Pang approaches this, a fine line between endorsement and condemnation, but instead looking at how the revolutionary culture of a new Chinese nation had the seeds to reinvent their culture by making it more participatory and democratic, yet also showing how Party politics and mass movements could be derailed and falter. A lot of really great chapters, I particularly enjoyed the chapter on Opera, and the differences between Cantonese and Mandarin opera styles, and the difficulties of translating and transposing revolutionary ideas along with regional difference.
"The performance culture was so important to the Cultural Revolution because the revolutionary spirit needed to be continuously performed. The person who performed this spirit would always be caught between being themselves and being a tool of the spirit"
Contrasting the frankly Orientalist idea of homogeneity and brainwashing in Communist China, Pang instead illustrates the way that new habits and customs allowed Chinese people to participate in popular culture in unprecedented ways. Love it
How does the "propaganda" culture-work actually work during the Maoist Proletariat Cultural Revolution?? What is actually the cultural logic behind it? Full of fantastic analysis and penetrating insights! First-rate critical scholarship that thinks about history face-to-face.