Sino-noir of Serial Killers and Dismemberments

In a Chinese society with low crime rates, why do TV series savor the genre of Sino-noir of serial killers and dismemberments? Ritualized bloodletting during  nightly bingeing signals a psychological displacement from one’s terminal condition, cowering under that which cannot be named—the dictators...

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Main Author: Sheng-mei Ma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexandru Ioan Cuza University Press 2024-12-01
Series:Linguaculture
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Online Access:https://journal.linguaculture.ro/index.php/home/article/view/381
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author Sheng-mei Ma
author_facet Sheng-mei Ma
author_sort Sheng-mei Ma
collection DOAJ
description In a Chinese society with low crime rates, why do TV series savor the genre of Sino-noir of serial killers and dismemberments? Ritualized bloodletting during  nightly bingeing signals a psychological displacement from one’s terminal condition, cowering under that which cannot be named—the dictatorship not so much of the proletariat as of the Party secretariat. Sino-noir on serial killers honors the Party while having it on, spoofing it. The obligatory “Chinese characteristics” hinge on the horror of body mutilation, mirroring a schizophrenic China not only divided against itself but in denial of any such division. The argument zooms in on Shuang Xuetao’s novella of dongbei (northeast or Manchuria) noir, “Moses on the Plain,” which chronicles how woes and crimes befall hapless characters fated to float or even drown during Deng Xiaoping’s liberalization, as many State-subsidized factories in northeastern China folded, creating massive unemployment and misery. Part of China, particularly coastal urban areas, boomed, while other parts, such as the Northeast’s heavy industry, went bust, a schizophrenic fissure within the body politic. In the 8-episode TV series, Why Try to Change Me Now, director Zhang Dalei adapts Shuang’s novella told from multiple perspectives into a tour de force in slow cinema, drawing from cinema verité with non-professional actors, natural lighting and sound, an almost stationary camera, and minimalist acting. The argument then concludes with the 16-episode TV series Who Is the Murderer capitalizing on the triple entendre of “ba” for the father, the hegemon/bully, and the end.
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spelling doaj-art-1c8f3943aeea49b6ac67106bb52e4d582025-01-13T02:40:12ZengAlexandru Ioan Cuza University PressLinguaculture2067-96962285-94032024-12-01152Sino-noir of Serial Killers and DismembermentsSheng-mei Ma0Michigan State University, U.S.A. In a Chinese society with low crime rates, why do TV series savor the genre of Sino-noir of serial killers and dismemberments? Ritualized bloodletting during  nightly bingeing signals a psychological displacement from one’s terminal condition, cowering under that which cannot be named—the dictatorship not so much of the proletariat as of the Party secretariat. Sino-noir on serial killers honors the Party while having it on, spoofing it. The obligatory “Chinese characteristics” hinge on the horror of body mutilation, mirroring a schizophrenic China not only divided against itself but in denial of any such division. The argument zooms in on Shuang Xuetao’s novella of dongbei (northeast or Manchuria) noir, “Moses on the Plain,” which chronicles how woes and crimes befall hapless characters fated to float or even drown during Deng Xiaoping’s liberalization, as many State-subsidized factories in northeastern China folded, creating massive unemployment and misery. Part of China, particularly coastal urban areas, boomed, while other parts, such as the Northeast’s heavy industry, went bust, a schizophrenic fissure within the body politic. In the 8-episode TV series, Why Try to Change Me Now, director Zhang Dalei adapts Shuang’s novella told from multiple perspectives into a tour de force in slow cinema, drawing from cinema verité with non-professional actors, natural lighting and sound, an almost stationary camera, and minimalist acting. The argument then concludes with the 16-episode TV series Who Is the Murderer capitalizing on the triple entendre of “ba” for the father, the hegemon/bully, and the end. https://journal.linguaculture.ro/index.php/home/article/view/381Sino-noirSerial KillersDismembermentsShuang Xuetao
spellingShingle Sheng-mei Ma
Sino-noir of Serial Killers and Dismemberments
Linguaculture
Sino-noir
Serial Killers
Dismemberments
Shuang Xuetao
title Sino-noir of Serial Killers and Dismemberments
title_full Sino-noir of Serial Killers and Dismemberments
title_fullStr Sino-noir of Serial Killers and Dismemberments
title_full_unstemmed Sino-noir of Serial Killers and Dismemberments
title_short Sino-noir of Serial Killers and Dismemberments
title_sort sino noir of serial killers and dismemberments
topic Sino-noir
Serial Killers
Dismemberments
Shuang Xuetao
url https://journal.linguaculture.ro/index.php/home/article/view/381
work_keys_str_mv AT shengmeima sinonoirofserialkillersanddismemberments