Detailed Information

Cited 0 time in webofscience Cited 0 time in scopus
Metadata Downloads

리샹란 영화가 투사한 제국의 환영* − ‘대륙 3부작’에 대한 반향을 중심으로The Fantasy of the Empire as Projected in Li Xianglan’s Films: Focusing on the Ramifications of the Continental Trilogy

Other Titles
The Fantasy of the Empire as Projected in Li Xianglan’s Films: Focusing on the Ramifications of the Continental Trilogy
Authors
장동천
Issue Date
2008
Publisher
한국중국현대문학학회
Keywords
Li Xianglan; Shirley Yamaguchi; Manchukuo Film Association; MFA; Cinema of Japanese colonies; Continental Trilogy; Manchurian Film
Citation
중국현대문학, no.46, pp.35 - 64
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
중국현대문학
Number
46
Start Page
35
End Page
64
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/134915
ISSN
1225-0716
Abstract
The Manchukuo Film Association(hereafter, MFA) was a government-controlled film studio affiliated to the South Manchurian Railway. It was founded in 1937 as a part of the Japanese colonial strategy on culture. MFA conjured a fantasy about the occupied territory of Manchuria and actively disseminated this fantasy to the colonized people. The most representative star of MFA was the actress and singer, Li Xianglan. Through a series of films, phonograph records and performances, she exerted an enormous influence on the extensive network that linked together Japan, Japan’s East Asian colonies and China. Her image, shaped by her roles in melodramas as an exotic girl, impressed the colonial audience and made them possess the fantasy on the colonized space. As an idol for the ‘Japan-Manchuria Goodwill,’ she became a symbolic icon of the Japanese cultural encroachment upon other East Asian countries. It was Japanese militarism that plotted to establish and control an East Asian transnational cultural network that sought to transcend the cultural boundary of each locality. Li Xianglan’s image as a legendary figure emerged alongside Japanese encroachment upon China and was shaped through the business strategies of Japanese film studios and entertainment companies during the wartime. In her films, colonial Manchuria under the Japanese occupation was falsely projected as if it were a fantasy. In particular, Chosŏn(Korea, before 1945) audiences watching her films saw Manchuria and confused it with China or the ‘continent.’ By representing the relationship between Japan and colonial Manchuria as a relationship between a wise and strong man and a docile woman, her films induced the colonial audiences to re-recognize Manchuria as a region that corresponded with Japan, thus facilitating the audiences’ cooperation with a colonial policy. From among the many melodramas produced by MFA, my paper, by focusing on three films starring Li Xianglan with Chinese backdrop, traces the path taken by the Chinese imagination in Japan and its colonies. These are the so-called the Continental Trilogy: Song of the White Orchid (1939), China Nights (1940) and Vow in the Desert (1940). First, I look at the ‘Li Xianglan myth’ that is still being reproduced in Japan. Next, I deal with the modifying process of the imagination of China through Manchuria in the other colonial audiences, which took place in Japan during the time when the ‘continental films’ were popular. Finally, I argue how the melodramatic style and exotic sentiment of her films could be welcomed by the colonial audiences, although they were a means of colonial propaganda.
Files in This Item
There are no files associated with this item.
Appears in
Collections
College of Liberal Arts > Department of Chinese Language and Literature > 1. Journal Articles

qrcode

Items in ScholarWorks are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Related Researcher

Researcher Zang, Dong Chion photo

Zang, Dong Chion
문과대학 (중어중문학과)
Read more

Altmetrics

Total Views & Downloads

BROWSE