Living in the spectacle of Hong Kong's skyscape, how often do its dwellers actually see, not to mention reach, its rooftops? Intriguingly, despite their apparent ephemerality and inaccessibility, the vertical fringes of the city feature frequently in Hong Kong cinema: the rooftop. In this article, we connect the cinematic trope of the rooftop to the anxiety of living in a postmetropolitan city like Hong Kong. We do so by walking with Georg Simmel's blasé attitude and Benjamin's flânerie in the metropolitan city, to meet Christoph Lindner's more (self-)destructive blasé individual trying to grapple with his postmetropolitan anxiety. Finally, we posit to understand the deployment of rooftops in Hong Kong cinema — in the crime thriller Inferna...
Nostalgia film was a theme that many Hong Kong filmmakers used to explore issues such as identity an...
In this captivating new book, photographer Michael Wolf takes readers on another fascinating adventu...
Hong Kong is the physical embodiment of neoliberalism at all levels of society, and the city itself ...
Hong Kong is internationally renowned for its density, often depicted by images of the dramatic skyl...
This chapter explores the cinematic representation of the socio-spatial (re)production of publicness...
This study explores the cinematic representation of socio-spatial practices by ordinary people in co...
This article addresses the role of vertical detachment in J. G. Ballard's novel High-Rise (1975/2006...
International audienceIf one were to create a map of the city of Hong Kong staged by Hollywood, it w...
Through a renewed emphasis on individual entrepreneurial freedoms, neoliberalism promises an economy...
Hong Kong, a global city continuously expanding vertically and multiplying the opportunities for pro...
As a space of extremes, the skyscraper has been continually constructed as an urban frontier in Amer...
This chapter argues that “neoliberalization” and “mainlandization” have become more accurate terms t...
...By examining the cinema of Hong Kong’s commercial crime film director Johnnie To, this dissertati...
Panel 3: Water Stories - Presentation on the filmMany scholars and viewers consider Hong Kong films ...
In postcards, on government websites, and in the pages of travel guides, Hong Kong is commonly prese...
Nostalgia film was a theme that many Hong Kong filmmakers used to explore issues such as identity an...
In this captivating new book, photographer Michael Wolf takes readers on another fascinating adventu...
Hong Kong is the physical embodiment of neoliberalism at all levels of society, and the city itself ...
Hong Kong is internationally renowned for its density, often depicted by images of the dramatic skyl...
This chapter explores the cinematic representation of the socio-spatial (re)production of publicness...
This study explores the cinematic representation of socio-spatial practices by ordinary people in co...
This article addresses the role of vertical detachment in J. G. Ballard's novel High-Rise (1975/2006...
International audienceIf one were to create a map of the city of Hong Kong staged by Hollywood, it w...
Through a renewed emphasis on individual entrepreneurial freedoms, neoliberalism promises an economy...
Hong Kong, a global city continuously expanding vertically and multiplying the opportunities for pro...
As a space of extremes, the skyscraper has been continually constructed as an urban frontier in Amer...
This chapter argues that “neoliberalization” and “mainlandization” have become more accurate terms t...
...By examining the cinema of Hong Kong’s commercial crime film director Johnnie To, this dissertati...
Panel 3: Water Stories - Presentation on the filmMany scholars and viewers consider Hong Kong films ...
In postcards, on government websites, and in the pages of travel guides, Hong Kong is commonly prese...
Nostalgia film was a theme that many Hong Kong filmmakers used to explore issues such as identity an...
In this captivating new book, photographer Michael Wolf takes readers on another fascinating adventu...
Hong Kong is the physical embodiment of neoliberalism at all levels of society, and the city itself ...