The Age of New Waves: Art Cinema and the Staging of Globalization
James Tweedie
Abstract
The Age of New Waves examines the origins of the concept of the “new wave” in 1950s France and the proliferation of new waves in world cinema over the past three decades. The book suggests that youth, cities, and the construction of a global market have been the catalysts for the cinematic new waves of the past half century. It begins by describing the enthusiastic engagement between French nouvelle vague filmmakers and American culture during the modernization of France after World War II. It then charts the growing and ultimately explosive disenchantment with the aftermath of th ... More
The Age of New Waves examines the origins of the concept of the “new wave” in 1950s France and the proliferation of new waves in world cinema over the past three decades. The book suggests that youth, cities, and the construction of a global market have been the catalysts for the cinematic new waves of the past half century. It begins by describing the enthusiastic engagement between French nouvelle vague filmmakers and American culture during the modernization of France after World War II. It then charts the growing and ultimately explosive disenchantment with the aftermath of that massive social, economic, and spatial transformation in the late 1960s. Subsequent chapters focus on films from Taiwan and mainland China during the 1980s and 1990s, and they link the propagation of new waves on the international film festival circuit to the “economic miracles” and consumer revolutions accompanying the process of globalization. While it travels from France to East Asia, the book follows the transnational movement of a particular model of cinema organized around mise en scène—or the interaction of bodies, objects, and spaces within the frame—rather than montage or narrative. The “master shot” style has become a key strategy for representing the changing relationship between people and the material world during the rise of a global market. The final chapter considers the interchange between two of the most global phenomena in recent film history—the transnational art cinema and Hollywood—and it searches for traces of an American new wave.
Keywords:
french new wave,
chinese cinema,
taiwanese cinema,
art cinema,
world cinema,
mise en scène,
globalization,
cities, youth culture
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2013 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199858286 |
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2014 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199858286.001.0001 |