发表于2024-11-21
Acting the Right Part 2024 pdf epub mobi 电子书
In his review, Jeremy Brown raises a bunch of questions: "where and by whom were they (the model operas) performed, and how often? Who watched them – could just anybody get a ticket?" I think I can answer these questions according to my very sketchy knowl...
评分In his review, Jeremy Brown raises a bunch of questions: "where and by whom were they (the model operas) performed, and how often? Who watched them – could just anybody get a ticket?" I think I can answer these questions according to my very sketchy knowl...
评分In his review, Jeremy Brown raises a bunch of questions: "where and by whom were they (the model operas) performed, and how often? Who watched them – could just anybody get a ticket?" I think I can answer these questions according to my very sketchy knowl...
评分In his review, Jeremy Brown raises a bunch of questions: "where and by whom were they (the model operas) performed, and how often? Who watched them – could just anybody get a ticket?" I think I can answer these questions according to my very sketchy knowl...
评分In his review, Jeremy Brown raises a bunch of questions: "where and by whom were they (the model operas) performed, and how often? Who watched them – could just anybody get a ticket?" I think I can answer these questions according to my very sketchy knowl...
图书标签: 海外中国研究 样板戏 文化大革命 文化研究 戏剧 陈小眉 文化史 表演研究
Xiaomei Chen. Acting the Right Part: Political Theater and Popular Drama in Contemporary China. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, 2002.
Acting the Right Part sets about to redress what Xiaomei Chen calls a “threefold marginalization” of modern Chinese theater in the field of literary and cultural studies (p. 20). First, scholars have privileged Chinese fiction and film over drama. Second, according to Chen many students of modern Chinese literature and culture dismiss the PRC period as having “produced no works of ‘literary excellence’” (p. 20). Third, within works that focus on PRC literature, the Cultural Revolution and early post-Mao periods are little studied.
Chen grew up in Beijing surrounded by theatrical luminaries from “Chinese theater’s golden age of the 50s” (p. 6; her mother was a famous actress and her father an accomplished stage designer for the China Youth Art Theater). Her personal insights and close relationships with top figures in the world of drama go a long way toward convincing readers that PRC theater is worth studying through the author’s cultural studies lens. This is particularly true for her five strong chapters about the semi-subversive powers of theater during the early post-Mao (mostly 1978 to 1980) years, when she attended many performances, gauged audience reactions, and interviewed key directors and actors. However, Chen’s enthusiasm and strong analysis of post-Cultural Revolution plays, combined with her somewhat uneven treatment of revolutionary model theater in chapters two and three, ends up undermining her attempt to rescue Cultural Revolutionary art from the scrap heap of scholarly oblivion.
To be fair, Chen makes several good points about drama during the Cultural Revolution, when a small number of officially sanctioned model works (eight revolutionary model works were promoted in 1967 and ten more were released after 1970) limited what people in China could watch and perform. By tracing the roots of revolutionary model theater back to themes and styles prevalent in the republican and early PRC periods, Chen adds much-needed historical context to our understanding of these works of art, which were surely not contrived in a purely “communist” or “extreme left” vacuum. The author’s sensitivity to context extends to her cogent analysis of the multiple revisions and political criticisms of pieces such as Baimao nü [The White-Haired Girl], which was a 1940s folk opera, a 1950 film, and finally a 1966 model ballet. In so doing she illustrates the “intimate and ironic relationship between theater and politics” that held true throughout the history of the PRC (p. 81).
Another important contribution is her focus on the Third World internationalist message of revolutionary model Peking operas like Longjiang song [Song of Dragon River] and Haigang [On the Docks]. That pieces celebrating unity between Chinese people and their oppressed African brothers and sisters resonated with visiting groups from Somalia in 1967, who performed a song in Somali called “Sing the Praise of Chairman Mao,” is an important reminder that the Cultural Revolution was an international phenomenon. Even if Chinese audiences were more receptive to operas highlighting pre-liberation suffering (Hongdengji [The Red Lantern], for example), it is worth remembering that the Cultural Revolution was in itself a theatrical event directly targeted at – and in some cases enthusiastically welcomed by – cultural consumers both domestic and foreign.
Unfortunately, such valuable historical insights are marred by several shortcomings. First, in contrast to the details on performance locations and audience reactions in later chapters on post-Mao theater, the author provides readers with hardly any information on how audiences actually viewed model theater during the Cultural Revolution. Yes, model works were certainly widespread and were emulated by children nationwide, as Chen relates from her personal experience. But where and by whom were they performed, and how often? Who watched them – could just anybody get a ticket? Instead of providing details, Chen invokes vague language to make the unsupported claim that model theater “reveals much about the way a people and a nation envisioned the self, imagined the other, and, in turn, as a result of coming to an understanding of the other, reconstructed the self” (p. 74).
More troubling than such fuzzy jargon are statements that tend to work against Chen’s mission to save Cultural Revolutionary art from its marginal state. If the model works were, as Chen asserts, “ideological indoctrination on a national scale” (p. 119), and cultural ideologues used the plays and ballets “to divert the attention of the populace from their severe poverty” (p. 78), and “no serious learning took place in Chinese schools during the Cultural Revolution” (p. 42), are readers not simply getting the same old Cultural Revolution wine in a new bottle labeled with fashionable phrases like “envisioning the self” and “imagining the other”? Especially when juxtaposed with Chen’s laudatory accounts of modern Chinese theater during the 1950s “golden age” and a second, anti-Gang of Four high point, it is difficult to see how Acting the Right Part’s general assessment really differs from conventional elite readings of the Cultural Revolution.
Jeremy Brown
本书由作者陈晓梅在博士论文基础上扩展而成,可与最近遭禁的作者回忆录做对照。本书珍贵之处在于作者家庭和成长环境,使其能够得到1949年后新剧团内第一手的人事和演出资料。本书对于1950年代戏剧历史的记录尤为珍贵。
评分Maoist model family很有意思,同意Z,womon transformed from an oppressed victim into a Communist warrior的叙事略简单
评分考试书!这个一定要牢牢标记一下,前前后后半个月,终于读完了。最讨厌读别人的论文,文革,红色娘子军神马的。我特别想咆哮啊,有没有啊,太TM伤筋动骨了,累死我了。
评分读了大部分~
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Acting the Right Part 2024 pdf epub mobi 电子书