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.
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INSIGHT

Huangshan Recast As Political Resource

  • Huangshan carried literati, Taoist, and Ming-loyalist associations, making it ideologically charged.
  • Filmmakers intentionally recoded Huangshan to serve socialist narratives, transforming mystic refuge into national resource.
INSIGHT

From Pilgrimage To Proletarian Gaze

  • Li Shizhen's summit gaze reframes mystical pilgrimage into pragmatic scientific labor: Huangshan becomes a vast pharmacy.
  • The film re-enchants the mountain as a monument to science, labor, and service to the masses.
INSIGHT

Jiangnan Waterways Carry Nostalgic Power

  • Jiangnan's waterways in Stage Sisters echo literati scrolls: they guide time, partition space, and mirror inner emotions.
  • Evoking Jiangnan risked nostalgia and literati identity, clashing with socialist realism in the 1960s.
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