

Author: Zhong Dafeng Zhang Zhen Zhang Yingjin
Publisher: Intellect Books
ISSN: 2049-6710
Source: Asian Cinema, Vol.9, Iss.1, 1997-09, pp. : 46-64
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Abstract
The history of filmmaking in China can be traced to the dawn of this century, 1905, the year when a photography studio in Beijing filmed select episodes of a popular play performed by the famous Peking opera actor Tan Xinpei. Film exhibition can be traced even further back, to 1896, but it was not until after the 1911 revolution had overthrown the Qing dynasty that cinema began to emerge as a mass medium for commercial entertainment. The popularization of cinema in China is intimately related to the disintegration of the Qing dynasty and the subsequent social changes. Although cinema was a novel medium introduced from the West, the Chinese attitude toward cinema was considerably informed by existing cultural traditions. The early development of Chinese cinema is inseparable from the transformation of traditional forms of entertainment through the impact of Western culture.
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