image description
# 701731
USD 68.00 (Book in Stock, will be dispatched ASAP)
- +

Legacies of the Drunken Master : Politics of the Body in Hong Kong Kung Fu Comedy Films

Author :  Luke White (Series Ed) Allison Alexy

Product Details

Country
Hong Kong
Publisher
University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
ISBN 9780824881573
Format HardBound
Language English
Year of Publication 2020
Bib. Info xii, 242p. ; 26 b&w illustrations. Includes Index ; Bibliography
Product Weight 510 gms.
Shipping Charges(USD)

Product Description

In 1978 the films Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow and Drunken Master, both starring a young Jackie Chan, caused a stir in the Hong Kong cinema industry and changed the landscape of martial arts cinema. Mixing virtuoso displays of acrobatic kung fu with knockabout humor to huge box office success, they broke the mold of the tragic and heroic martial arts film and sparked not only a wave of imitations, but also a much longer trend for kung fu comedies that continues to the present day. Legacies of the Drunken Master—the first book-length analysis of kung fu comedy—interrogates the politics of the films and their representations of the performing body. It draws on an interdisciplinary engagement with popular culture and an interrogation of the critical literature on Hong Kong and martial arts cinema to offer original readings of key films. These readings pursue the genre in terms of its carnival aesthetic, the utopias of the body it envisions, its highly stylized depictions of violence, its images of masculinity, and the registers of its “hysterical” laughter. The book’s analyses are carried out amidst kung fu comedy’s shifting historical contexts, including the aftermath of the 1960s radical youth movements, the rapidly globalizing colonial enclave of Hong Kong and the emerging consciousness of its 1997 handover to China, and the transnationalization of cinema audiences. It argues that through kung fu comedy’s images of the body, the genre articulated in complex and often contradictory ways political realities relevant to late twentieth-century Hong Kong and the wider conditions of globalized capitalism. The kung fu comedy entwines us in a popular cultural history that stretches into the folk past and forward into utopian and dystopian possibilities. Theoretically rich and critical, Legacies of the Drunken Master aims to be at the forefront of scholarship on martial arts cinema. It also addresses readers with a broader interest in Hong Kong culture and politics during the 1970s and 1980s, postcolonialism in East Asia, and action and comedy films in a global context—as well as those fascinated with the performing body in the martial arts.

Content Details

1. Martial arts film - China - Hong Kong - History and criticism. 2. Comedy films - China - Hong Kong - History and criticism. 3. Human body in motion pictures. 4. Violence in motion pictures. 5. Masculinity in motion pictures.

Product added to Cart
Copied