"This magisterial book is an extraordinary landmark in both Chinese film studies and the broader exploration of cinema itself. In his multifaceted paradigm of realism, Jason McGrath finds a master code for understanding Chinese film across the span of its history: conceptually vivid and analytically riveting, this superb study is a must-read for any student or scholar of the moving image."—Margaret Hillenbrand, author of Negative Exposures: Knowing What Not to Know in Contemporary China
"Meticulously researched, Chinese Film focuses on the multiple manifestations of realism in the longue durée history, tracking a key aesthetic-political articulation embedded in the film medium in general and Chinese cinema in particular. Especially valuable is Jason McGrath’s insistence on situating each mode of realism and its transformation within richly textured historical contexts."—Yiman Wang, author of Remaking Chinese Cinema: Through the Prism of Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Hollywood
"Chinese Film: Realism and Convention from the Silent Era to the Digital Age is one of the most ambitious, thought-provoking, and groundbreaking works on the subject to date."—Modern Chinese Literature Cultures
"This magnum opus—the fruit of many years’ work and thought—rethinks cinematic realism and proposes it as a conceptual framework for making sense of Chinese cinema as a whole."—The China Journal
"Chinese Film is ambitious both in its historical scope and intellectual claims. (One sometimes wonders, in fact, what isn’t encompassed by McGrath’s expansive typology of realisms.) Well written and researched, the book is sure to reach a broad audience in film studies."—China Quarterly
"McGrath offers a cross-cultural perspective with scholarly research and cinematic examples from China and other cultures including the United States, France, Korea, Iran, and Japan. His approach bridges the distances that may exist between these cultures, and the book’s in-depth engagement with a multitude of writings on cinematic realism provides a solid theoretical foundation for the historical study of Chinese cinematic realism."—Film Quarterly
"Chinese Film is a fascinating work that sheds light on the tumultuous relationships between the seventh art, society, and politics, and above all, the aesthetic and philosophic relationship to the medium of film in its ability to capture the infinite diffractions of the real."—China Perspectives
"A superb overview of the history of Chinese films. McGrath argues, cohesively and convincingly, that the struggle over realism defines films from mainland China."—CHOICE
"Jason McGrath’s Chinese Film - Realism and Convention from the Silent Era to the Digital Age is undoubtedly a monumental work."—Global Media China
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