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Shitou (activist)

Shitou (born 1969) is a Chinese activist, actress, filmmaker, multimedia artist,[1] and gay icon.[2] She has been active in the Chinese gay scene since the 1990s and was the first lesbian to come out on Chinese television.

Biography

Shitou (石头) was born in 1969 in Guizhou to an ethnic Miao family[3] and graduated from the Guizhou Art Academy. Shitou was a part of the Yanmingyuan artist colony in 1992 before its dissolution in1995.[4] In 2000, Shitou was featured on a Hunan Satellite Television talk show program called "Approaching Homosexuality". According to scholar Hong Wei Bao, this was "the first time that a self-identified... lesbian 'came out' in PRC's official media."[5]Shitou became one of the most prominent figures for lesbian activism in China.[6] Scholar Tingting Wei points out that while Shitou’s ‘coming out’ was broadcast on television, cultural attitudes and the PRC viewed homosexuality as a crime and a mental disorder at the time.[7]

In 2001 Shitou had a starring role as Xiaoling in the Chinese lesbian film Fish and Elephant.[8] She later went on to direct several films, many in collaboration with her partner, Ming Ming. Her first was Dyke March (2002).[9] In 2006 Shitou released the documentary/essay film Women Fifty Minutes (女人五十分钟)[10] and in 2015 directed the film We Are Here. Shitou helped found the Beijing Queer Film Festival and the China Queer Film Festival Tour.[3]

Activism

1995 United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women

Shitou documented the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in her film We Are Here (2015), co-directed by Zhao Jing (赵静).[11] In the documentary, Shitou and Zhao Jing film and interview attendees who recount how the most controversial topic at the conference was lesbian rights, especially in the context of women’s rights at this conference that took place in Beijing, China.[12] Lesbian organizers claim that lesbian rights were not intended to be a part of the conference at all. Shitou is known for using documentary film as a tool for activism and political change, and in her film, she draws attention to lesbian rights issues and highlights how lesbian rights cannot be separated from women’s rights.[11]

As one key part of the conference, there was a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) Forum that was scheduled. The NGO Forum was meant to take place in downtown Beijing, but instead its activities and organizers were moved to Huairou, located about 50 kilometres outside of downtown Beijing.[7] At this location, there were seven ‘diversity’ tents that were set up. Lesbian organizers and international LGBT NGOs were able to set up a lesbian tent, which happened to be one of the most popular spots at the NGO Forum. The lesbian tent provided an opportunity for lesbians from China to interact and meet international lesbian organizers for the first time. During the NGO Forum, international lesbian organizers connected to host fundraising workshops, movie screenings, discuss challenges, strategies for activism, and more.[7]

As a result of this collective organizing, lesbians were acknowledged in the United Nations conference. More than 300 people visited the lesbian tent and more than 500 people participated in the lesbian parade, where individuals and groups called for the recognition of lesbian rights.[7] Lesbian voices were also represented and supported during the process of creating the Beijing Platform for Action/Beijing Declaration amongst government officials and international representatives.[7]

Beijing Queer Film Festival

Both a feminist and a lesbian activist, Shitou helped to create the first Chinese gay and lesbian film festival in Beijing with collaborators Cui Zi’en and Wan Yanhai, along with the help of many other Chinese LGBT creatives.[13] Five movies were screened at the first Beijing Queer Film Festival that took place in December 2001 on the Peking University campus, which is also known as the Beijing University campus.[13] At the same time, alternative versions of queer movies were sourced and screened at a nearby bar.[13] When the Public Security Bureau discovered that the film festival was happening on campus, they immediately intervened and put an end to the movie screenings.

The second time around, in April 2005, the number of movies selected for the film festival increased from 5 to 12 domestic and international films.[13] Participants and filmmakers from Hong Kong, Taipei, Jinan, and Beijing were invited to the film festival.  Once again, Chinese authorities were alerted of the film festival, and they intervened to order attendees to evacuate the premises of Peking University. However this time, key organizers like Shi Tou, Cui Zi’en, and Wan Yanhai had prepared a backup plan. Using resources and financial support from Wan Yanhai’s organization, they shifted the film festival’s venue to “798”, an old factory that had no affiliation with the university.[13]

In 2011, they were met with the same conditions and evacuation demands from Chinese authorities. Key organizers continued to prepare backup locations for screenings, but they soon realized that the city of Beijing was not an ideal location to host an organized LGBT film festival.[12] After the film festivals in 2013 and 2014, the Beijing Queer Film Festival was redesigned and moved to the Institut Français Beijing. By relocating and rebranding the film festival, organizers were able to avoid government interference. Shitou and many of the original organizers are no longer directly involved with the film festival.[12]

Filmmaking

Method and Collaborators

Shitou uses documentary filmmaking as a tool for social and political change, particularly in her lesbian activism. Due to limited resources as an independent filmmaker, Shitou began her filmmaking career by using non-traditional methods such as digital video technology to film her projects.[14] These tactics were shared amongst filmmakers in the region, where they collaborated to learn how to take advantage of DV technology when there was no blockbuster budget available for independent queer filmmakers.[14] DV technology was also widely available, cheap, and an accessible method to produce and create films.  

With an educational background in the creative arts, and Shitou created many works in the fields of photography and oil painting, but when it came to filmmaking, she was self-taught.[12] She has made 3 documentary films so far. Themes that are often found in her films include feminist and queer histories, and broader social and political issues like the loss of culture and uneven development in different regions in China, as seen in her film Women 50 Minutes (2006).[12] In Dyke March (2002), Shitou uses her personal experience as a Chinese lesbian and a participatory approach to embody what the real-life experience is like for a lesbian.[12]

Modes of Production and Distribution

State censorship was and continues to be a major barrier for queer filmmakers in China. In China, the censorship system for films means that new films must pass inspection from the Beijing Film Bureau[13] and the State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television.[12] Institutions and organizations within the censorship system have the power to ban queer films from being produced and they can control where and how films are released.[12] To bypass some of the censorship laws, organizers acquired and screened pirated versions of queer films from the black market and various unofficial channels.[13] Domestically produced Chinese queer films like Shitou’s have a better chance of reaching an international audience rather than a Chinese audience due to the strict censorship laws.[12] Both domestically produced and illegally sourced queer films have therefore been distributed in underground channels, such as semi-organized film festivals like the Beijing Queer Film Festival.[12]

Reception

Scholar Hongwei Bao proposes that lesbian filmmakers like Shitou were not creating documentaries and queer films with the intent of seeing commercial success for themselves; rather, they were creating films to represent themselves and to create an archival historical record of lesbian existence.[12] Queer Chinese films were met with support and allyship from international audiences and creatives.[13]

Filmography

Shitou Filmography[3]
Film Year Role
Fish and Elephant 2001 Xiaoling
Dyke March 2002 Director
Gu Wenda: Art, Politics, Life, Sexuality 2005 Director
Women Fifty Minutes 2006 Director
Gate, Mountain, River 2006 Director
Queer China, Comrade China 2008 Herself
We Are Here 2015 Director

See Also

References

  1. ^ "A History of Lesbians Organizing in China – China Development Brief". Retrieved 2021-02-18.
  2. ^ Engebretsen, Elisabeth Lund. 2008. Love in a big city: Sexuality, kinship, and citizenship amongst lala ('lesbian') women in beijing. Ph.D. diss., London School of Economics and Political Science (United Kingdom), p.234.
  3. ^ a b c Bao, Hongwei. "Queer eye for Chinese women: Locating queer spaces in shitou's film Women Fifty Minutes." Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art 6, no. 1 (2019): 77+. Gale Academic OneFile (accessed February 18, 2021).
  4. ^ "woman on film". www.fridae.asia. Retrieved 2021-02-19.
  5. ^ Bao, Hongwei. "Queer comrades: towards a postsocialist queer politics." Soundings: A journal of politics and culture 73 (2019): 24-37. muse.jhu.edu/article/742550.
  6. ^ Liang, Shi (2004). ""Beginning a New Discourse: The First Chinese Lesbian Film 'Fish and Elephant.'"". Film Criticism. 28 (3): 21–36. JSTOR 44019136 – via JSTOR.
  7. ^ a b c d e Wei, Tingting (2015). "A Look at the Beijing Conference Through Lesbian Eyes". Asian Journal of Women's Studies. 21 (3): 316–325. doi:10.1080/12259276.2015.1072944. S2CID 155370554 – via Omni.
  8. ^ Shi, Liang (2015). Chinese lesbian cinema : mirror rubbing, lala, and les. Lanham [Maryland]. ISBN 978-0-7391-8848-4. OCLC 894895375.
  9. ^ Tan, Jia (2016-01-01). "Aesthetics of queer becoming: Comrade Yue and Chinese community-based documentaries online". Critical Studies in Media Communication. 33 (1): 38–52. doi:10.1080/15295036.2015.1129064. ISSN 1529-5036. S2CID 147187211.
  10. ^ Reynaud, Bérénice. "The Good Cats of Chinese Documentary – Senses of Cinema". Retrieved 2021-02-18.
  11. ^ a b Bao, Hongwei (2020). ""'We Are Here': the politics of memory in narrating China's queer feminist history". Continuum. 34 (4): 514–529. doi:10.1080/10304312.2020.1785079. S2CID 221054770 – via Omni.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bao, Hongwei (2019). [doi:10.1080/25785273.2019.1662197 "The 'Queer Generation': Queer Community Documentary in Contemporary China"]. Transnational Screens. 10 (3): 201–216. doi:10.1080/25785273.2019.1662197. S2CID 203044540 – via Omni. {{cite journal}}: Check |url= value (help)
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Zi'en, Cui; Liu, Petrus (2010). [muse.jhu.edu/article/393900 "The Communist International of Queer Film"]. Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique. 18 (2): 417–423. doi:10.1215/10679847-2010-008. S2CID 142909791 – via MUSE. {{cite journal}}: Check |url= value (help)
  14. ^ a b Zhou, Yuxing (2014). "Chinese Queer Images on Screen: A Case Study of Cui Zi'en's Films". Asian Studies Review. 38 (1): 124–140. doi:10.1080/10357823.2013.865703. S2CID 143490039 – via Omni.

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Shitou born 1969 is a Chinese activist actress filmmaker multimedia artist 1 and gay icon 2 She has been active in the Chinese gay scene since the 1990s and was the first lesbian to come out on Chinese television Contents 1 Biography 2 Activism 2 1 1995 United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women 2 2 Beijing Queer Film Festival 3 Filmmaking 3 1 Method and Collaborators 3 2 Modes of Production and Distribution 3 3 Reception 4 Filmography 5 See Also 6 ReferencesBiography EditShitou 石头 was born in 1969 in Guizhou to an ethnic Miao family 3 and graduated from the Guizhou Art Academy Shitou was a part of the Yanmingyuan artist colony in 1992 before its dissolution in1995 4 In 2000 Shitou was featured on a Hunan Satellite Television talk show program called Approaching Homosexuality According to scholar Hong Wei Bao this was the first time that a self identified lesbian came out in PRC s official media 5 Shitou became one of the most prominent figures for lesbian activism in China 6 Scholar Tingting Wei points out that while Shitou s coming out was broadcast on television cultural attitudes and the PRC viewed homosexuality as a crime and a mental disorder at the time 7 In 2001 Shitou had a starring role as Xiaoling in the Chinese lesbian film Fish and Elephant 8 She later went on to direct several films many in collaboration with her partner Ming Ming Her first was Dyke March 2002 9 In 2006 Shitou released the documentary essay film Women Fifty Minutes 女人五十分钟 10 and in 2015 directed the film We Are Here Shitou helped found the Beijing Queer Film Festival and the China Queer Film Festival Tour 3 Activism Edit1995 United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women Edit Shitou documented the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in her film We Are Here 2015 co directed by Zhao Jing 赵静 11 In the documentary Shitou and Zhao Jing film and interview attendees who recount how the most controversial topic at the conference was lesbian rights especially in the context of women s rights at this conference that took place in Beijing China 12 Lesbian organizers claim that lesbian rights were not intended to be a part of the conference at all Shitou is known for using documentary film as a tool for activism and political change and in her film she draws attention to lesbian rights issues and highlights how lesbian rights cannot be separated from women s rights 11 As one key part of the conference there was a Non Governmental Organization NGO Forum that was scheduled The NGO Forum was meant to take place in downtown Beijing but instead its activities and organizers were moved to Huairou located about 50 kilometres outside of downtown Beijing 7 At this location there were seven diversity tents that were set up Lesbian organizers and international LGBT NGOs were able to set up a lesbian tent which happened to be one of the most popular spots at the NGO Forum The lesbian tent provided an opportunity for lesbians from China to interact and meet international lesbian organizers for the first time During the NGO Forum international lesbian organizers connected to host fundraising workshops movie screenings discuss challenges strategies for activism and more 7 As a result of this collective organizing lesbians were acknowledged in the United Nations conference More than 300 people visited the lesbian tent and more than 500 people participated in the lesbian parade where individuals and groups called for the recognition of lesbian rights 7 Lesbian voices were also represented and supported during the process of creating the Beijing Platform for Action Beijing Declaration amongst government officials and international representatives 7 Beijing Queer Film Festival Edit Both a feminist and a lesbian activist Shitou helped to create the first Chinese gay and lesbian film festival in Beijing with collaborators Cui Zi en and Wan Yanhai along with the help of many other Chinese LGBT creatives 13 Five movies were screened at the first Beijing Queer Film Festival that took place in December 2001 on the Peking University campus which is also known as the Beijing University campus 13 At the same time alternative versions of queer movies were sourced and screened at a nearby bar 13 When the Public Security Bureau discovered that the film festival was happening on campus they immediately intervened and put an end to the movie screenings The second time around in April 2005 the number of movies selected for the film festival increased from 5 to 12 domestic and international films 13 Participants and filmmakers from Hong Kong Taipei Jinan and Beijing were invited to the film festival Once again Chinese authorities were alerted of the film festival and they intervened to order attendees to evacuate the premises of Peking University However this time key organizers like Shi Tou Cui Zi en and Wan Yanhai had prepared a backup plan Using resources and financial support from Wan Yanhai s organization they shifted the film festival s venue to 798 an old factory that had no affiliation with the university 13 In 2011 they were met with the same conditions and evacuation demands from Chinese authorities Key organizers continued to prepare backup locations for screenings but they soon realized that the city of Beijing was not an ideal location to host an organized LGBT film festival 12 After the film festivals in 2013 and 2014 the Beijing Queer Film Festival was redesigned and moved to the Institut Francais Beijing By relocating and rebranding the film festival organizers were able to avoid government interference Shitou and many of the original organizers are no longer directly involved with the film festival 12 Filmmaking EditMethod and Collaborators Edit Shitou uses documentary filmmaking as a tool for social and political change particularly in her lesbian activism Due to limited resources as an independent filmmaker Shitou began her filmmaking career by using non traditional methods such as digital video technology to film her projects 14 These tactics were shared amongst filmmakers in the region where they collaborated to learn how to take advantage of DV technology when there was no blockbuster budget available for independent queer filmmakers 14 DV technology was also widely available cheap and an accessible method to produce and create films With an educational background in the creative arts and Shitou created many works in the fields of photography and oil painting but when it came to filmmaking she was self taught 12 She has made 3 documentary films so far Themes that are often found in her films include feminist and queer histories and broader social and political issues like the loss of culture and uneven development in different regions in China as seen in her film Women 50 Minutes 2006 12 In Dyke March 2002 Shitou uses her personal experience as a Chinese lesbian and a participatory approach to embody what the real life experience is like for a lesbian 12 Modes of Production and Distribution Edit State censorship was and continues to be a major barrier for queer filmmakers in China In China the censorship system for films means that new films must pass inspection from the Beijing Film Bureau 13 and the State Administration of Radio Film and Television 12 Institutions and organizations within the censorship system have the power to ban queer films from being produced and they can control where and how films are released 12 To bypass some of the censorship laws organizers acquired and screened pirated versions of queer films from the black market and various unofficial channels 13 Domestically produced Chinese queer films like Shitou s have a better chance of reaching an international audience rather than a Chinese audience due to the strict censorship laws 12 Both domestically produced and illegally sourced queer films have therefore been distributed in underground channels such as semi organized film festivals like the Beijing Queer Film Festival 12 Reception Edit Scholar Hongwei Bao proposes that lesbian filmmakers like Shitou were not creating documentaries and queer films with the intent of seeing commercial success for themselves rather they were creating films to represent themselves and to create an archival historical record of lesbian existence 12 Queer Chinese films were met with support and allyship from international audiences and creatives 13 Filmography EditShitou Filmography 3 Film Year RoleFish and Elephant 2001 XiaolingDyke March 2002 DirectorGu Wenda Art Politics Life Sexuality 2005 DirectorWomen Fifty Minutes 2006 DirectorGate Mountain River 2006 DirectorQueer China Comrade China 2008 HerselfWe Are Here 2015 DirectorSee Also EditCui Zi en Wan Yanhai Li Yu director Wei Tingting Ming MingReferences Edit A History of Lesbians Organizing in China China Development Brief Retrieved 2021 02 18 Engebretsen Elisabeth Lund 2008 Love in a big city Sexuality kinship and citizenship amongst lala lesbian women in beijing Ph D diss London School of Economics and Political Science United Kingdom p 234 a b c Bao Hongwei Queer eye for Chinese women Locating queer spaces in shitou s film Women Fifty Minutes Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art 6 no 1 2019 77 Gale Academic OneFile accessed February 18 2021 woman on film www fridae asia Retrieved 2021 02 19 Bao Hongwei Queer comrades towards a postsocialist queer politics Soundings A journal of politics and culture 73 2019 24 37 muse jhu edu article 742550 Liang Shi 2004 Beginning a New Discourse The First Chinese Lesbian Film Fish and Elephant Film Criticism 28 3 21 36 JSTOR 44019136 via JSTOR a b c d e Wei Tingting 2015 A Look at the Beijing Conference Through Lesbian Eyes Asian Journal of Women s Studies 21 3 316 325 doi 10 1080 12259276 2015 1072944 S2CID 155370554 via Omni Shi Liang 2015 Chinese lesbian cinema mirror rubbing lala and les Lanham Maryland ISBN 978 0 7391 8848 4 OCLC 894895375 Tan Jia 2016 01 01 Aesthetics of queer becoming Comrade Yue and Chinese community based documentaries online Critical Studies in Media Communication 33 1 38 52 doi 10 1080 15295036 2015 1129064 ISSN 1529 5036 S2CID 147187211 Reynaud Berenice The Good Cats of Chinese Documentary Senses of Cinema Retrieved 2021 02 18 a b Bao Hongwei 2020 We Are Here the politics of memory in narrating China s queer feminist history Continuum 34 4 514 529 doi 10 1080 10304312 2020 1785079 S2CID 221054770 via Omni a b c d e f g h i j k Bao Hongwei 2019 doi 10 1080 25785273 2019 1662197 The Queer Generation Queer Community Documentary in Contemporary China Transnational Screens 10 3 201 216 doi 10 1080 25785273 2019 1662197 S2CID 203044540 via Omni a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Check url value help a b c d e f g h Zi en Cui Liu Petrus 2010 muse jhu edu article 393900 The Communist International of Queer Film Positions East Asia Cultures Critique 18 2 417 423 doi 10 1215 10679847 2010 008 S2CID 142909791 via MUSE a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Check url value help a b Zhou Yuxing 2014 Chinese Queer Images on Screen A Case Study of Cui Zi en s Films Asian Studies Review 38 1 124 140 doi 10 1080 10357823 2013 865703 S2CID 143490039 via Omni Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shitou activist amp oldid 1131994148, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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