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Active HORIZON European Commission

Resilient Cultures – Music, Art, and Cinema in Mainland China and Hong Kong

€2.5M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Universiteit Van Amsterdam
Country Netherlands
Start Date Jan 01, 2024
End Date Dec 31, 2028
Duration 1,826 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101097553
Grant Description

How to be critical in a context where critique is disavowed? How to speak against power while being silenced? How to stay amidst suppression?

RESCUE studies how cultural practices in the domains of popular music, contemporary art, and queer cinema, in mainland China and Hong Kong, develop resilient tactics to express their social and political discontent. It theorises resilience and cultural critique in times of intensified authoritarianism and rapid platformization.

Whereas such practices can resort to a history of experiences in China to negotiate a recently intensified authoritarianism, cultural practitioners in Hong Kong are facing a compressed authoritarianism still searching for resilient tactics.RESCUE studies indie music in Hong Kong; folk music in China; the role of official and unofficial art institutes in China and Hong Kong; socially engaged art projects in rural and urban areas in China and Hong Kong; and queer cinema and queer film festivals in China and Hong Kong.

It develops a relational comparative analysis between different cultural fields, and at different localities (Hong Kong, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Tianshui), to unpack the (im)possibilities of critique.

RESCUE develops an innovative methodological toolkit, combining ethnography with textual analysis, digital methods, and collaborative research.

RESCUE will establish and consolidate a network of academics, cultural practitioners, and activists in mainland China, Hong Kong, East Asia, and Europe, through multiple workshops, a podcast series, performances, screenings, and an exhibition thereby increasing the social impact of the project.

Findings will not only attest to the multivocality, diversity, and vitality of cultural production in mainland China and Hong Kong, thus pushing back against the idea of the omnipotent Chinese state, but also inspire and forge connections to other localities facing a comparable predicament (e.g. Brazil, Hungary, India, Russia, and Turkey).

All Grantees

Universiteit Van Amsterdam

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