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The Communist International of Queer Films: The Radical Culture of the Beijing Queer Film Festival

Bao, Hongwei

The Communist International of Queer Films: The Radical Culture of the Beijing Queer Film Festival Thumbnail


Authors



Contributors

Steve Presence
Editor

Mike Wayne
Editor

Abstract

This chapter addresses the Euro-American-centrism in the study of radical film cultures by examining cinematic and political practices in a non-Western context. It shifts radical film research’s traditional emphasis on class to an intersectional approach that recognises complex interplays between different identities, including gender, sexual, class and national identities. I suggest that sexuality has an important role to play in radical politics, and that queer film festivals are important sites for radical film cultures to develop. Indeed, while neoliberal capitalism and the nation state often exert a powerful influence on queer film cultures transnationally, not all queer film festivals are radical, broadly understood as democratic, egalitarian, anti-capitalist and anti-normativity in this context (Richards 2016, 2017). If many queer film festivals in the Global North are seen as middle-class-serving, lifestyle-oriented and consumption-driven and have thus lost their critical edge, queer film festivals in many parts of the Global South are still charged with creative energies and radical potentials exactly because of state illiberalism and neoliberal governance, as my study of the BJQFF hopes to demonstrate.

In this chapter, I first trace a brief genealogy of the BJQFF with a focus on changing festival venues in order to see how the festival uses ‘guerrilla tactics’ to fight government intervention and contest neoliberal capitalism. Following this, I examine the various names that the festival has used, as well as the organising strategies of the festival, including organising principles, audience engagement and film dissemination. To conclude the chapter, I consider the political implications of the BJQFF in a transnational context by linking radical film culture to postsocialist cultural politics. I argue that radical film cultures represented by the BJQFF help us appreciate the value of some ideas and practices from socialist histories in the neoliberal, postsocialist present.

Citation

Bao, H. (2020). The Communist International of Queer Films: The Radical Culture of the Beijing Queer Film Festival. In S. Presence, M. Wayne, & J. Newsinger (Eds.), Contemporary Radical Film Culture: Networks, Organisation and Activists (190-202). Routledge

Online Publication Date Jul 15, 2020
Publication Date 2020
Deposit Date May 10, 2020
Publicly Available Date Jan 16, 2022
Pages 190-202
Book Title Contemporary Radical Film Culture: Networks, Organisation and Activists
ISBN 9781138543614
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/4412200
Related Public URLs https://www.routledge.com/Contemporary-Radical-Film-Culture-Networks-Organisations-and-Activists/Presence-Wayne-Newsinger/p/book/9781138543614
Additional Information Website states book has copyright year: 2021.
Contract Date Feb 12, 2020

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