âInsisting we hear, listen, and see the voices and actions of women filmmakers in China, Lingzhen Wang provides a nuanced examination of women's cinema and feminism that attends to national and transnational trajectories. She develops theoretically sophisticated and politically incisive critiques of how dominant frameworks in socialist China and throughout the world configured the realms of possibility for making, seeing, and recognizing socialist and Chinese women's mainstream film. An exciting, innovative, and theoretically rich project.â
- Tina Mai Chen, coeditor of, Film, History, and Cultural Citizenship: Sites of Production
âLingzhen Wang is the first Chinese scholar writing in English to point out the eerie parallels between post-Mao feminism and post-second-wave Anglo-European feminism as she negotiates the political legacies of two cultures, illuminating the traditions of the one for the other. <i>Revisiting Women's Cinema</i> is likely to rock the history of world cinema and inspire a resurgence of interest in the project of globalizing feminist film and media theory. I can think of no other book on feminism and motion picture film history that is more important to the field than this one.â
- Jane Gaines, Professor of Film, Columbia University,
"<i>Revisiting Womenâs Cinema</i> is a rich and thought-provoking revisionist account of Chinese womenâs cinema. . . . In addition to reinvigorating feminist theory, the book opens up new avenues for exploring the interaction of the political and the aesthetic, the mainstream and the experimental in Chinese cinema."
- Xiaoning Lu, The China Quarterly
"<i>Revisiting Womenâs Cinema</i> proposes an approach that juxtaposes the classic theoretical tools such as film criticism, and feminist methodology with sociological research methods covering interviews, and fieldwork materials. It concludes that culture, socioeconomic factors, auteursâ careers, and geopolitical forces jointly constitute female directorsâ film aesthetics and their historical significance. Thus, this book should be of relevance to many different fields of social science."
- Qin Qin, Gender, Place & Culture
"<i>Revisiting Womenâs Cinema </i>is of particular interest and value to scholars and students in film studies and gender studies. Wangâs extensive research and insightful analysis provide a compelling exploration of the representation and contributions of women in Chinese cinema."
- Hasan GĂźrkan, International Feminist Journal of Politics