'When does inspired creativity become plagiarism? What is the difference between video piracy and free trade? Globalisation has made these hot button issues today, and Pang Laikwan's Cultural Control and Globalisation in Asia shows us why. Her analyses of, for example, stylized violence in the production of an Asian cinematic identity and Kill Bill's copying of it versus attempts to control copying of DVDs of Kill Bill, are vivid and vital reading for anyone who wants to understand the forces shaping contemporary Asian cinematic culture.'
- Chris Berry, Professor of Film and Television Studies, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK
'This book makes a valuable contribution to discussions of global film culture. Through an original exploration of the role of copying in Asian (and American) cinema, Pang offers us new ways to think about issues ranging from copyright to the relations between global and local cinematic production. And through an equally originally discussion of violence in cinema, Pang opens up a new perspective on the problem of the relations between images and practices of violence. It will be a welcome addition to those trying to globalize the study of media.'
- Lawrence Grossberg Morris Davis Distinguished Professor of Communication Studies and Cultural Studies, University of North Carolina, USA
Pang maintains a radical perspective in her hopes of producing a book that will'help us envision a culture with a higher degree of autonomy and resistance against hegemonic control' (p. 13). Towards this end, she makes a complex, critical, and thoroughly interesting argument in this lucid piece of interdisciplinary scholarship that should appeal to legal scholars as much as to scholars of cinema and cultural studies. In spite of its theoretical eclecticism*or perhaps because of it*the book manages to present a cogent and often very concrete account of the complexities, and sometimes ambivalences, of contemporary Asian cinema within the context of capitalism, political control, and globalization. - Asian Journal of Communication
Pang maintains a radical perspective in her hopes of producing a book that will'help us envision a culture with a higher degree of autonomy and resistance against hegemonic control' (p. 13). Towards this end, she makes a complex, critical, and thoroughly interesting argument in this lucid piece of interdisciplinary scholarship that should appeal to legal scholars as much as to scholars of cinema and cultural studies. In spite of its theoretical eclecticism*or perhaps because of it*the book manages to present a cogent and often very concrete account of the complexities, and sometimes ambivalences, of contemporary Asian cinema within the context of capitalism, political control, and globalization. - Asian Journal of Communication
'When does inspired creativity become plagiarism? What is the difference between video piracy and free trade? Globalisation has made these hot button issues today, and Pang Laikwan's Cultural Control and Globalisation in Asia shows us why. Her analyses of, for example, stylized violence in the production of an Asian cinematic identity and Kill Bill's copying of it versus attempts to control copying of DVDs of Kill Bill, are vivid and vital reading for anyone who wants to understand the forces shaping contemporary Asian cinematic culture.'
- Chris Berry, Professor of Film and Television Studies, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK
'This book makes a valuable contribution to discussions of global film culture. Through an original exploration of the role of copying in Asian (and American) cinema, Pang offers us new ways to think about issues ranging from copyright to the relations between global and local cinematic production. And through an equally originally discussion of violence in cinema, Pang opens up a new perspective on the problem of the relations between images and practices of violence. It will be a welcome addition to those trying to globalize the study of media.'
- Lawrence Grossberg Morris Davis Distinguished Professor of Communication Studies and Cultural Studies, University of North Carolina, USA