Cinema under National Reconstruction
State Censorship and South Korea's Cold War Film Culture
Theoretically sophisticated and extensively researched, Hye Seung Chung’s Cinema under National Reconstruction reveals the ways in which multiple actors (the state, the film industry, the public) negotiate the definition of national cinema. A groundbreaking work that takes Korean film censorship studies to a new level.
Hye Seung Chung’s brilliant book deepens our understanding of cinema as a site of social and political contest. The product of impressive research in Korean and American archives, it offers a rare comparative perspective on censorship practices on both sides of the Pacific. Chung challenges conventional wisdom about the always-deleterious effects of censorship and profoundly revises our understanding of Korean filmmakers’ relationship to the state. Her analysis of government and industry records provides an important corrective to scholars’ reliance on the words and perspectives directors, who were often sidelined during the censorship process. A major contribution to postwar Korean film history.’
Hye Seung Chung's provocative study sheds new light on the ways state censorship functioned—and malfunctioned—in Korea during the Cold War. She challenges the usual narrative—in which an oppressive, all-powerful censorship regime strangled artistic creativity in the Korean motion picture industry—and argues instead for a more nuanced understanding both of the apparatus of state censorship and the ways Korean filmmakers operated within and around it.'
NOTE ON TEXT
CHRONOLOGY
A LIST OF AGENCIES AND ACRONYMS
INTRODUCTION: Archival Revisionism and New Korean Film Historiography
CHAPTER 1: Fending off Darkness, Uplifting National Cinema: Korean Film Censorship and The Stray Bullet
CHAPTER 2: From Blackboard Jungle to The Teahouse of the August Moon: Censoring Hollywood in Postcolonial Korea
CHAPTER 3: Myths of Martyrs and Heroes in a Godless Land: Interagency Regulation of 1960s Anticommunist Films
CHAPTER 4: Cinematic Censorship as Sentimental Education: Indoctrinating Gaiety as National Emotion in Yushin-Era Youth Comedies
CHAPTER 5: Censors as Audiences and Vice Versa: Sex, Politics, and Labor in 1981
CHAPTER 6: Beyond Oral Histories and Trade Legends: A Bourdieusian-Foucauldian Deconstruction of Anti-Censorship Myths
EPILOGUE: Media Ratings, the End of Censorship?
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INDEX