
New Books in Chinese Studies Mia Yinxing Liu, "Literati Lenses: Wenren Landscape in Chinese Cinema of the Mao Era" (U Hawai’i Press, 2019)
Oct 21, 2025
Mia Yinxing Liu, an Assistant Professor specializing in modern and contemporary Chinese art, explores how Mao-era cinema creatively engaged with traditional literati landscape painting. She reveals how landscapes served as covert symbols to navigate strict political censorship. Liu discusses the transformation of iconic sites like Huangshan and how cinematic imagery reflects national sentiments. The conversation delves into the interplay between politics and aesthetics, and how women's roles in films convey emotional truths and historical narratives.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Childhood Billboards Sparked Her Interest
- Mia Liu recounts watching her uncle paint film billboards and free movies as a child, which sparked her love of cinema and art.
- That early exposure shaped her interdisciplinary path into art history and film studies.
Landscape As Central Expressive Form
- Landscape in Chinese cinema functions like an equivalent to the European nude: it's a central expressive form, not mere backdrop.
- Mia Liu argues landscapes act as allegory, mirror of the age, and portal for subversive meaning beyond dialogue.
Landscape Evades Censoring Texts
- Visual landscape could slip past textual censors because scripts underwent heavy review while images were judged later.
- Filmmakers used literati landscape allusions to reactivate shared cultural meanings without explicit dialogue.

