Czasopismo
Tytuł artykułu
Autorzy
Warianty tytułu
Comrade Te Wei
Języki publikacji
Abstrakty
The article discusses a subject that has not been examined in Polish Film Studies yet, namely the specifics of the classic animated film from the People’s Republic of China (1957–1989) through the prism of the life and work of Te Wei, a doyen of Chinese animation. The author aims to define a category of the “Shanghai School of Animation” and to coin the term “minzu style” which refers both to aesthetics and the ideological assumptions of Chinese animation art. As early as in the 1930s Te Wei was engaged in propaganda activities on behalf of the Communist Party of China realizing patriotic manhua. In 1949, he led the animation department at Changchun Film Studio and from 1957 he was the head of the Shanghai Animation Film Studio (SAFS). In 1957, Te Wei called animators to undertake the challenge of constructing a specifically Chinese style of animation and to use Western medium (cinematograph) in order to transmit Chinese “essence” through new techniques (e.g. ink-wash animation) and references to traditional symbolics (among others, Peking Opera). In this way, animated film production was adapted to the paradigm of Maoist propaganda that glorified Chinese cultural supremacy. For Chinese authors, veiled philosophical reflection of the relations between man and nature became the only available way of smuggling “artistic contraband” under totalitarian censorship, the possibility of expression that was fully exploited in the last film of the Chinese master (Feelings from Mountains and Water, 1988), completed in a period of modernization.
Czasopismo
Rocznik
Numer
Strony
105-123
Opis fizyczny
Daty
wydano
2014
Twórcy
autor
- Uniwersytet Jagielloński
Bibliografia
- Alder O., Te Wei. Chinese Doyen. Chinese Doyen of Animation, „Plateau” 1994, nr 2.
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- Ehrlich D., Jin T., Animation in China, w: Animation in Asia and the Pacific, red. J.A. Lent, Sydney 2000.
- Encyclopedia of Chinese Film, red. Y. Zhang, Z. Xiao, New York – Londyn 2002.
- Fairbanks J.K., Historia Chin. Nowe spojrzenie, tłum.T. Lechowska, Z. Słupski, Gdańsk 1996.
- Fang J.P., Symbols and Rebuses in Chinese Art. Figures, Bugs, Beasts and Flowers, Berkeley – Toronto 2004.
- Farquhar M.A., Monks and Monkey: A Study of National Style in Chinese Animation, „Animation Journal” 1993, nr 1, s. 4–27.
- Gao J., The Expressive Act in Chinese Art. From Calligraphy to Painting, „Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis. Aesthetica Upsaliensia 7” 1996.
- Jin Y., Arts in China, tłum. P. Wang, X. Zhao, Beijing 2009.
- Kasarełło L., Chińska kultura symboliczna. Jej współczesne metamorfozy w literaturze, teatrze i malarstwie, Warszawa 2011.
- Lent J.A., Xu Y., Chinese Animation Film: From Experimentation to Digitalization, w: Art, Politics and Commerce in Chinese Cinema, red. Y. Zhu, S. Rosen, Hong Kong 2010.
- Lent J.A., Xu Y., Te Wei and Chinese Animation: Inseparable, Incomparable, [online] <http://www.awn.com/animationworld/te-wei-and-chinese-animation-inseparable-incomparable>, dostęp: 15.03.2014.
- Sitkiewicz P., Małe wielkie kino. Film animowany od narodzin do okresu klasycznego, Gdańsk 2009.
- Wu W., In Memory of Meishu Film: Catachresis and Metaphor in Theorizing Chinese Animation,„Animation Interdisciplinary Journal” 2009, nr 1.
- Xu G.G., Chinese Cinema and Technology, w: A Companion to Chinese Cinema, red. Y. Zhang, Oxford 2012.
- Yi W., New China’s Film Exchange with the Outside World, [online] <http://www.chinaculture.org/focus/2009-09/16/content_349223_2.htm>, dostęp: 15.03.2014.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikatory
Identyfikator YADDA
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