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Chinese Kung-fu Films and the Posthuman Daoism
Author(s) -
Kin Yuen Wong
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of posthumanism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2634-3584
pISSN - 2634-3576
DOI - 10.33182/jp.v1i1.1351
Subject(s) - posthuman , posthumanism , aesthetics , art , transhumanism , natural (archaeology) , literature , philosophy , art history , history , epistemology , archaeology
This paper argues that Chinese- Kung-fu films are unique presentations of human movement as a system of bodily aesthetics. By adopting a Daoist aesthetics of yin-yang cosmology, martial artists perform the dictum by Zhuanzi’s “The myriad things come out of ji and go into ji”, with the character ji as some kind of the Deleuzian “desiring machine”. There we see a human-technicality convergence as characterized by a posthuman merger within the process of complex visuality, particularly presented through the cinematic form. Kung-fu performance on screen, therefore, affords a kind of natural cyborg intersectionality within what can be called a posthuman Daoism, a kind of commingling of the ancient and posthuman technics.

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