“Yomi Braester takes us beyond this notion of film as a time capsule for a vanishing reality. . . . Braester’s expertly localized study is essential reading for devotees of Sinophone film who lack intimate knowledge of contemporary urban culture in the PRC and Taiwan.” - Andrew Chan, Film Comment
“In this well-researched work, Yomi Braester takes a fresh look at Chinese urban cinema and stage plays from 1949 to the 2008 Olympics. . . . Painting the City Red will remain an important reference book for scholars of urban cinema and urbanization for years to come.” - Jenny Huangfu, China Journal
“. . . Braester’s point remains valid: as a device that mediates between state and non-state actors, visual media play a crucial and often overlooked role in the creation of new forms of urbanism. Any scholar of film, urban studies, and Asian history in general would be well served to read this book.” - Emily Baum, Journal of Asian Studies
“[T]he book offers rich insights into how Chinese cinema has responded to urban policies, participating in debates on how the city should develop, disseminating images of power, documenting alternative ways of using public space, and, in recent years, helping preserve historical memory in contexts of rapid change.” - Paola Iovene, American Historical Review
“Painting the City Red is an exciting intervention in studies on cinema and the city. It provides a wealth of fascinating original research and insight into the way Chinese cities have appeared on film. But, equally important, it also argues for a new approach to the topic. Moving beyond analysis of the films themselves, it also includes remarkable research into the negotiations amongst city planners, politicians, developers and residents that shape the vision of the city.”—Chris Berry, Goldsmiths, University of London
“Yomi Braester’s Painting the City Red is not only a signal contribution to our understanding of urban space and visual culture in China, but one of the most thorough explorations of the city in cinema of any kind to appear in recent years. Braester is a matchless guide to the ways film and theatrical productions have been used to shape the future city, foster new spatial practices, and mediate between visions of a vanishing architectural past and the metropolis to come. The book is essential reading for anyone interested in the lightspeed urbanization of contemporary China, and how the creative destruction of its cities has played out on screen and stage.”—Thomas J. Campanella, author of The Concrete Dragon: China's Urban Revolution and What It Means for the World
"Braester’s point remains valid: as a device that mediates between state and non-state actors, visual media play a crucial and often overlooked role in the creation of new forms of urbanism. Any scholar of film, urban studies, and Asian history in general would be well served to read this book.”
~Emily Baum, Journal of Asian Studies
“[T]he book offers rich insights into how Chinese cinema has responded to urban policies, participating in debates on how the city should develop, disseminating images of power, documenting alternative ways of using public space, and, in recent years, helping preserve historical memory in contexts of rapid change.”
~Paola Iovene, American Historical Review
“In this well-researched work, Yomi Braester takes a fresh look at Chinese urban cinema and stage plays from 1949 to the 2008 Olympics. . . . Painting the City Red will remain an important reference book for scholars of urban cinema and urbanization for years to come.”
~Jenny Huangfu, The China Journal
“Yomi Braester takes us beyond this notion of film as a time capsule for a vanishing reality. . . . Braester’s expertly localized study is essential reading for devotees of Sinophone film who lack intimate knowledge of contemporary urban culture in the PRC and Taiwan.”
~Andrew Chan, Film Comment