
Hong Kong was a key battlefield in Asia's cultural cold war. After 1948-1949, an influx of filmmakers, writers, and intellectuals from mainland China transformed British Hong Kong into a hub for mass entertainment and popular publications. While there was no organized movement for independence, largely because of its location directly next to Mao's China, Hong Kong was central in the cultural contest between Communist China, Nationalist Taiwan, and the United States.Hong Kong Media and Asia's Cold War discusses how China, Taiwan, and the U.S. fought to mobilize Hong Kong cinema and print media to sway ethnic Chinese in Southeast Asia and across the world. Central to this propaganda and psychological warfare was the emigre media industry. This period was the “golden age” of Mandarin cinema and popular culture. Throughout the 1967 Riots and the 1970s, the emergence of a new, local-born generation challenged and reshaped the Cold War networks of émigré cultural production, contributing to the gradual decline of Hong Kong's cultural Cold War. Through untapped archival materials, contemporary sources, and numerous interviews with filmmakers, magazine editors, and student activists, Po-Shek Fu explores how global conflicts were localized and intertwined with myriad local historical experiences and cultural formation.
This book investigates how Hong Kong served as a critical site for cultural and psychological warfare between Communist China, Nationalist Taiwan, and the United States during the Cold War. Po-Shek Fu, a scholar specializing in Chinese cultural history, utilizes a combination of previously untapped archival materials, contemporary media sources, and oral history interviews. The work argues that the influx of mainland intellectuals and filmmakers transformed the city into a strategic hub for propaganda, where global political conflicts were localized through the production of Mandarin cinema and popular print media.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in Asian studies and media history recognize this work as a significant contribution to understanding the localized impacts of global Cold War tensions. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the research and the depth of the archival evidence provided by the author.
Page Count:
252
Publication Date:
2023-03-14
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190073764
ISBN-13:
9780190073763
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