Ghost movies, the makers, and their audiences: Andrea Lauser in conversation with the filmmakers Katarzyna Ancuta and Solarsin Ngoenwichit from Thailand and Mattie Do from Laos

2016 | book part

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​Ghost movies, the makers, and their audiences: Andrea Lauser in conversation with the filmmakers Katarzyna Ancuta and Solarsin Ngoenwichit from Thailand and Mattie Do from Laos​
Lauser, A. ​ (2016)
In:​Bräunlein, Peter J.; Lauser, Andrea​ (Eds.), Ghost Movies in Southeast Asia and Beyond pp. 256​-279. ​Leiden: ​Brill. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004323643_013 

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Authors
Lauser, Andrea 
Editors
Bräunlein, Peter J.; Lauser, Andrea 
Abstract
Ghost Movies in Southeast Asia and Beyond explores ghost movies, one of the most popular film genres in East and Southeast Asia, by focusing on movie narratives, the cultural contexts of their origins and audience reception. In the middle of the Asian crisis of the late 1990s, ghost movies became major box office hits. The emergence of the phenomenally popular "J-Horror" genre inspired similar ghost movie productions in Korea, Thailand, Taiwan, Hong Kong, the Philippines and Singapore. Ghost movies are embedded and reflected in national as well as transnational cultures and politics, in narrative traditions, in the social worlds of the audience, and in the perceptual experience of each individual. They reflect upon the identity crises and traumas of the living as well as of the dead, and they unfold affection and attraction in the border zone between amusement and thrill, secular and religious worldviews. This makes the genre interesting not only for sociologists, anthropologists, media and film scholars, but also for scholars of religion
Issue Date
2016
Publisher
Brill
Organization
Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät ; Institut für Ethnologie 
Series
Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde. Southeast Asia Mediated 
ISBN
978-90-04-32340-7
Language
English

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