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Film and Culture Series

Primitive Passions: Visuality, Sexuality, Ethnography, and Contemporary Chinese Cinema

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Chow situates contemporary Chinese film within the broad context of Chinese history and culture, giving readers a glimpse of the unique shared identity that characterizes the current crop of outstanding filmmakers, such as Chen Kaige and Zhang Yimou.

252 pages, Paperback

First published April 15, 1995

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About the author

Rey Chow

47 books55 followers
Rey Chow is a Chinese-American cultural critic, specializing in 20th-century Chinese fiction and film and postcolonial theory. Educated in Hong Kong and the United States, she has taught at several major American universities, including Brown University. Chow is currently Anne Firor Scott Professor of Literature at Duke University.

Chow's writing challenges assumptions in many different scholarly conversations including those about literature, film, visual media, sexuality and gender, postcolonialism, ethnicity, and cross-cultural politics. Chow explores the problematic assumptions about non-Western cultures and ethnic minorities within the context of academic discourse as well as in more public discourses about ethnic and cultural identity. Many of her explorations of critical concepts have been recognized by scholars as important, including her ideas about visualism, the ethnic subject and cultural translation.

Chow's research comprises theoretical, interdisciplinary, and textual analyses. Since her years as a graduate student at Stanford University, she has specialized in the making of cultural forms such as literature and film (with particular attention to East Asia, Western Europe, and North America), and in the discursive encounters among modernity, sexuality, postcoloniality, and ethnicity. Her book PRIMITIVE PASSIONS was awarded the James Russell Lowell Prize by the Modern Language Association. Before coming to Duke, she was Andrew W. Mellon Professor of the Humanities at Brown University, where she held appointments in the Departments of Comparative Literature, English, and Modern Culture and Media. In her current work, Chow is concerned with the legacies of poststructuralist theory, the politics of language as a postcolonial phenomenon, and the shifting paradigms for knowledge and lived experience in the age of visual technologies and digital media.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Josh Brett.
87 reviews6 followers
January 15, 2013
Mostly incomprehensible critical theory jargon. Not half as fun as the title "Primitive Passions" sounds. But probably important. :(
Profile Image for yuefei.
96 reviews
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December 11, 2021
For the most part relatively accessible, interwoven with some very dense passages, but well worth digging into for its insights into intercultural relations and especially China’s relation to modernity and its collective past.

[Institute of Education Library, UCL]
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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