Description

Explores the relationship between soft power and film in relation to national and transnational cinemas Examines the implications for global film culture of the apparent shift in power relations between the developed and developing world Consideration given to the transnational dimension of film cultures Discusses the relationship between film culture and soft power in the BRICS countries and the UK The apparent shift in power relations between the developed and developing world, along with the increasing emphasis that national and transnational organisations place on the role of 'soft power' in global foreign policy, has profound implications for global film culture. Focusing primarily on the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), this innovative collection examines the diverse and often competing ways the group as a whole engages with film as a medium of artistic expression, and as a 'soft power' resource. The contributors explore the wider implications for world cinema of its members' differing and dynamic positions in the global media landscape, and the book includes a comparative analysis by examining the post-imperial soft power of the UK at the time of Brexit.

Cinema and Soft Power: Configuring the National and Transnational in Geo-Politics

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Paperback / softback by Stephanie Dennison , Rachel Dwyer

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Explores the relationship between soft power and film in relation to national and transnational cinemas Examines the implications for global... Read more

    Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
    Publication Date: 25/01/2023
    ISBN13: 9781474456289, 978-1474456289
    ISBN10: 1474456286

    Number of Pages: 256

    Description

    Explores the relationship between soft power and film in relation to national and transnational cinemas Examines the implications for global film culture of the apparent shift in power relations between the developed and developing world Consideration given to the transnational dimension of film cultures Discusses the relationship between film culture and soft power in the BRICS countries and the UK The apparent shift in power relations between the developed and developing world, along with the increasing emphasis that national and transnational organisations place on the role of 'soft power' in global foreign policy, has profound implications for global film culture. Focusing primarily on the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), this innovative collection examines the diverse and often competing ways the group as a whole engages with film as a medium of artistic expression, and as a 'soft power' resource. The contributors explore the wider implications for world cinema of its members' differing and dynamic positions in the global media landscape, and the book includes a comparative analysis by examining the post-imperial soft power of the UK at the time of Brexit.

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