How the World Works

The deep structure of kung fu panda-monium

After some initial hesitancy on the part of aggrieved nationalists, Chinese audiences have welcomed "Kung Fu Panda" with enthusiasm. This pleases How the World Works, since our own reaction to the Dreamworks movie was that it was a mash note to Chinese culture, rather than a rip-off.

But for a truly virtuoso deconstruction of the film in the context of the larger universe of kung fu movie tradition, readers must hie themselves immediately to Haiyan Lee's "Kung Fu Panda: Go Home!," published today at the excellent China Beat blog.

An assistant professor at the University of Colorado who specializes in modern Chinese literature, Lee demonstrates an impressive level of kung-fu-osity, along with setting forth a compelling argument as to how "Kung Fu Panda" radically threatens some ancient themes of the kung fu flick genre.

Any essay that namechecks "The Hulk," "The Lord of the Rings," YouTube, "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" and casually drops the word "panda-monium" is obviously worth reading, but Lee's thesis isn't easily summarized. So I'll just give you the last line:

In this sense, Kung Fu Panda is a disarmingly cute and merry face of the global modernity that has made it impossible for anyone to lay claim to beloved cultural symbols as inviolable national patrimony.

Posted in: China

Prelude to the debate: Dow falls 508
Character assassination may lose its appeal after two very bad days for Wall Street and Main Street.
Krugman: "We are all Brazilians now"
Balance sheet contagion rules the global economy. "Interdependence" is becoming a dirty word.
Another step toward nationalizing the finance sector
Reactions to the Fed's plan to lend directly to businesses. Plus: Rachel Maddow interviews Paul Krugman.
Another day, another radical Fed plan
The bailout is so last week -- Bernanke and friends are plotting a new dramatic government "rescue" attempt

About How the World Works

A conversation about globalization.

Recent Posts

Krugman: "We are all Brazilians now"
Balance sheet contagion rules the global economy. "Interdependence" is becoming a dirty word.
Another step toward nationalizing the finance sector
Reactions to the Fed's plan to lend directly to businesses. Plus: Rachel Maddow interviews Paul Krugman.
Another day, another radical Fed plan
The bailout is so last week -- Bernanke and friends are plotting a new dramatic government "rescue" attempt

Full Archive

RSS Feed

Posts by date

October 2008
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031

Comments?

You can e-mail me directly at aleonard@salon.com. But to join the conversation with your comments, please use our letters to the editor feature at the bottom of each article.