|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
After the end of World War II when many Southeast Asian nations
gained national independence, and up until the Asian Financial
Crisis, film industries here had distinctive and colourful
histories shaped by unique national and domestic conditions.
Southeast Asia on Screen: From Independence to Financial Crisis
(1945-1998) addresses the similar themes, histories, trends,
technologies and sociopolitical events that have moulded the art
and industry of film in this region, identifying the unique
characteristics that continue to shape cinema, spectatorship and
Southeast Asian filmmaking in the present and the future. Bringing
together scholars across the region, chapters explore the
conditions that have given rise to today's burgeoning Southeast
Asian cinemas as well as the gaps that manifest as temporal
belatedness and historical disjunctures in the more established
regional industries.
Around five million people across Southeast Asia identify as Shan.
Though the Shan people were promised an independent state in the
1947 Union of Burma constitution, successive military governments
blocked their liberation. From 1958 onward, insurgency movements,
including the Shan United Revolution Army, have fought for
independence from Myanmar. Refugees numbering in the hundreds of
thousands fled to Thailand to escape the conflict, despite
struggling against oppressive citizenship laws there. Several
decades of continuous rebellion have created a vacuum in which
literati and politicians have constructed a virtual Shan state that
lives on in popular media, rock music, and Buddhist ritual. Based
on close readings of Shan-language media and years of ethnographic
research in a community of soldiers and their families, Jane M.
Ferguson details the origins of these movements and tells the story
of the Shan in their own voices. She shows how the Shan have forged
a homeland and identity during great upheaval by using state
building as an ongoing project of resistance, resilience, and
accommodation within both countries. In avoiding a good/bad moral
binary and illuminating cultural complexities, Repossessing
Shanland offers a fresh perspective on identity formation,
transformation, and how people understand and experience
borderlands today.
Around five million people across Southeast Asia identify as Shan.
Though the Shan people were promised an independent state in the
1947 Union of Burma constitution, successive military governments
blocked their liberation. From 1958 onward, insurgency movements,
including the Shan United Revolution Army, have fought for
independence from Myanmar. Refugees numbering in the hundreds of
thousands fled to Thailand to escape the conflict, despite
struggling against oppressive citizenship laws there. Several
decades of continuous rebellion have created a vacuum in which
literati and politicians have constructed a virtual Shan state that
lives on in popular media, rock music, and Buddhist ritual. Based
on close readings of Shan-language media and years of ethnographic
research in a community of soldiers and their families, Jane M.
Ferguson details the origins of these movements and tells the story
of the Shan in their own voices. She shows how the Shan have forged
a homeland and identity during great upheaval by using state
building as an ongoing project of resistance, resilience, and
accommodation within both countries. In avoiding a good/bad moral
binary and illuminating cultural complexities, Repossessing
Shanland offers a fresh perspective on identity formation,
transformation, and how people understand and experience
borderlands today.
|
|