Fr. 166.00

Film and Constitutional Controversy - Visualizing Hong Kong Identity in Age of One Country, Two Systems

English · Hardback

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Description

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Constructs an original dialogue between constitutional law, film, and identity by using Hong Kong as a case study.

List of contents










1. Love in a Time of Transition: Ng See-yuen's The Unwritten Law; 2. Laughing at the Law: Johnnie To's Justice, My Foot!; 3. Women's Rights and Censorship: Andrew Lau's Raped by an Angel; 4. The Common Law After 1997: Joe Ma's Lawyer, Lawyer; 5. A Matter of National Security: Tammy Cheung's July; 6. Choosing the Leader: Chief Executive Elections and Hong Kong Gangster Films; 7. Scenes From a Traumatic Event: Documenting Occupy Central (with Observations on Cinema and the Anti-Extradition Bill Protests); 8. Coda: Wong Kar-wai's 2046; Bibliography; Filmography; Index.

About the author

Marco Wan is Associate Professor of Law and Director of the Law and Literary Studies Programme at the University of Hong Kong. He is trained in both legal and literary/cultural studies, and his research focuses on law and film, law and literature, and the ways in which perspectives from the humanities shed light on the legal regulation of gender and sexuality. His first book, Masculinity and the Trials of Modern Fiction (2017), was awarded the Penny Pether Prize from the Law, Literature, and Humanities Association of Australasia. He is Managing Editor of Law and Literature.

Summary

Using Hong Kong as a case study, this book argues that film can show us how constitutional controversies impact upon cultural identity, a crucial dimension overlooked in conventional legal analysis. Provides new interpretations of key constitutional issues and films. Draws upon author's background in both legal and literary/cultural studies.

Additional text

'Marco Wan's Film and Constitutional Controversy is a fascinating contribution that makes creative use of the nexus between film, culture, and law to trace Hong Kong's unique historical trajectory. At the same time, Wan draws on Hong Kong's singular relationship to the rule of law to offer fresh insights into how film and law can be mutually illuminating.' Michel Rosenfeld, University Professor of Law and Comparative Democracy, Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University

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