Hai Karate and Kung Fuey: Early Martial Arts Tropes in British Advertising

Sally Chan, Emily Caston, Maddie Ohl, S. Nixon
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper focuses on the responsibility of advertising messages to authentically mirror and reflect British audience feelings towards ‘the Other’ and discusses caricatures of the Chinese in advertising through early martial arts tropes. It provides contextual background to Chinese depictions on screen in Britain before illustrating martial arts representations on print and television advertising during the 1970s. The paper includes examples of two popular brands in Britain: Pfizer’s ‘Hai Karate’ (1973) and Golden Wonder’s ‘Kung Fuey’ (1974-76) to illustrate colonial notions of the ‘Oriental’ during the 1960s and ’70s. This interdisciplinary study borrows from ethical representation and martial arts discourse in film and TV, to explain the exoticisation and exclusion of the Chinese in the context of authenticity and appropriation in advertising.
海道功夫:英国早期广告中的武术奖杯
本文着重探讨了广告信息真实反映和反映英国观众对“他者”情感的责任,并通过早期的武术比喻讨论了广告中对中国人的讽刺。它为20世纪70年代在印刷品和电视广告中展示武术之前,英国屏幕上的中国描绘提供了背景。这篇论文包括了两个在英国流行的品牌的例子:辉瑞的“Hai Karate”(1973年)和Golden Wonder的“Kung Fuey”(1974-76年),以说明20世纪60年代和70年代“东方”的殖民概念。这项跨学科研究借用了电影和电视中的伦理表征和武术话语,解释了在广告真实性和挪用性的背景下,中国人的外来化和排斥。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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