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Informationen zum Autor JUN OKADA is an assistant professor of English and director of film studies at the State University of New York, Geneseo. Klappentext The words "Asian American film” might evoke a painfully earnest, low-budget documentary or family drama, destined to be seen only in small film festivals or on PBS. In her groundbreaking study of the past fifty years of Asian American film and video, Jun Okada demonstrates that although this stereotype is not entirely unfounded, a remarkably diverse range of Asian American filmmaking has emerged. Inhaltsverzeichnis AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: The Shared History of Asian American Film and Video and Public Interest MediaChapter 1: “Noble and Uplifting and Boring as Hell”: Asian American Film and Video, 1971–1982Chapter 2: The Center for Asian American Media and the Televisual Public SphereChapter 3: Pathology as Authenticity: ITVS, Terminal USA, and the Televisual Struggle Over Positive/Negative ImagesChapter 4: Dismembered from History: The Counternostalgia of Gregg ArakiChapter 5: Better Luck Tomorrow and the Transnational Reframing of Asian American Film and VideoChapter 6: Post–Asian American Feature Film: The Persistence of Institutionality in Finishing the Game: The Search for a New Bruce Lee and American ZombieAfterwordNotesBibliographyIndex