Abstract

This essay discusses how documentary filmmaking opens up a space for women to intervene in contemporary debates on the question of subjectivity in Taiwan. The argument is fleshed out with two case studies: a film by an indigenous woman documentary filmmaker and the other by a middle-class young mother trying to establish herself as a professional artist/scholar in the age of media technology. With its focus on the ethical response to the marginalized other in the indigenous community as the thematic concern, Si-Manirei's And Deliver Us from the Evil (2001) intervenes in contemporary indigenous movement in Taiwan by breaking new ground in thinking about the constitution of indigenous subjectivity. Somewhere Over the Cloud (2008), on the other hand, addresses the ambiguous impact of media technology on the constitution of subjectivity in a world of transnational image/labour flows. Though very different in their concerns and narrative styles, the two films by Taiwanese women filmmakers not only open up new dimensions in thinking about the gender politics in documentary filmmaking but also illustrates the impact of media technology on the everyday life as well as the professional space of women from different ethnic backgrounds.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call