This article examines three films by the Chinese feminist scholar and documentary filmmaker Ai Xiaoming on the HIV blood scandal in China, in which victims who became infected with the human immunodeficiency virus through blood donations and blood transfusions often failed to obtain compensation from the government or the law courts. The law fails to ensure a just outcome. Drawing on the recent work of scholars working on law and image, and especially new scholarship on the relationship between law, film, affect and ethics, this article argues that Ai's documentaries present a series of imagistic evidence against the law, and in doing so puts the law on trial
The Story of Qiu Ju (1992) is a Chinese film by renowned director Zhang Yimou. The documentary-like...
This Article challenges stereotypes and misconceptions about law-genre documentaries. Part I will pr...
Ai Xiaoming, born in 1953 in Wuhan, is a retired professor in the literature department of Guangzhou...
In previous issues of China Heritage Quarterly we have published material related to the documentary...
Before making her Oscar-winning documentary on AIDS orphans in rural China, The Blood of Yingzhou Di...
Session 8a: The Ever Popular Monstrous MothersThis paper will examine matricide and the mother-as-mu...
China’s independent documentaries – films produced outside the country’s official state-sanctioned p...
© 2012 Elaine Jeffreys. Prostitution Scandals in China presents an examination of media coverage of ...
This diploma thesis describes the situation of independent documentary film in the People’s Republic...
© 2011 Dr. Yu Xing ZhouThis thesis explores the impact of digital video (DV) filmmaking on Chinese c...
The article discusses moral and ethical aspects of cinematography in the modern nation-state of Chin...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.The ways in which HIV has been...
While previous “law and film” scholarship has concentrated mainly on Hollywood films, this article e...
Owing to China’s austere censorship regulations on film media, directors of films and documentaries ...
Session 3: 7.11 Portraying the Human: Panelist 1This paper explores the cinematic treatment of law, ...
The Story of Qiu Ju (1992) is a Chinese film by renowned director Zhang Yimou. The documentary-like...
This Article challenges stereotypes and misconceptions about law-genre documentaries. Part I will pr...
Ai Xiaoming, born in 1953 in Wuhan, is a retired professor in the literature department of Guangzhou...
In previous issues of China Heritage Quarterly we have published material related to the documentary...
Before making her Oscar-winning documentary on AIDS orphans in rural China, The Blood of Yingzhou Di...
Session 8a: The Ever Popular Monstrous MothersThis paper will examine matricide and the mother-as-mu...
China’s independent documentaries – films produced outside the country’s official state-sanctioned p...
© 2012 Elaine Jeffreys. Prostitution Scandals in China presents an examination of media coverage of ...
This diploma thesis describes the situation of independent documentary film in the People’s Republic...
© 2011 Dr. Yu Xing ZhouThis thesis explores the impact of digital video (DV) filmmaking on Chinese c...
The article discusses moral and ethical aspects of cinematography in the modern nation-state of Chin...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.The ways in which HIV has been...
While previous “law and film” scholarship has concentrated mainly on Hollywood films, this article e...
Owing to China’s austere censorship regulations on film media, directors of films and documentaries ...
Session 3: 7.11 Portraying the Human: Panelist 1This paper explores the cinematic treatment of law, ...
The Story of Qiu Ju (1992) is a Chinese film by renowned director Zhang Yimou. The documentary-like...
This Article challenges stereotypes and misconceptions about law-genre documentaries. Part I will pr...
Ai Xiaoming, born in 1953 in Wuhan, is a retired professor in the literature department of Guangzhou...