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The evolution process and the cause of the spatial distribution of cinemas in the Shanghai settlements (1919–1943)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2020

Weiqing Zhao*
Affiliation:
Research Institute of Journalism and Communication, Communication University of Zhejiang, 998 Xueyuan St, Jianggan District, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 310019, China
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]

Abstract

In the first decades of the twentieth century, Shanghai became China's most important film centre, for both production and distribution. The city hosted the largest number of movie theatres in the country. After the establishment of the first theatre in 1908 by a Spanish national, the distribution of movie theatres gradually transferred and expanded from Hongkew District, north of Suzhou Creek to the south bank of the International Settlement. This article examines the characteristics of the distribution of movie theatres in the city from the perspective of authorities’ policy, population density, population structure, traffic and cultural space. It analyses the factors leading to the particular geographical distribution and discusses the possible links between the space of cinema, urban development and urban cultural space.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press.

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References

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49 Generally speaking, the war weathered all kinds of industries, but the situation in Shanghai's settlements was just the opposite. The entertainment industry was prosperous because of the war, so this abnormal phenomenon was termed a ‘deformity’.

50 Zou, Jiu Shanghai renkou bianqian de yanjiu, 79.

51 Land prices may have been one of the factors behind such a distribution. The average land price per acre in the Hongkew area was far cheaper than in the International Settlement, in the south of Suzhou Creek. In 1903, the real estate per acre in the centre of the International Settlement (the original British Settlement) was valued at 13,549 taels, while the northern area was valued at 4,819 taels per acre and the eastern part per acre was valued at 2,539 taels. Initially, the audience was limited in size, so land prices were probably a factor for site selection. But land prices were less important than population density and population structure. In 1930, in the International Settlement, the real estate in the central area was valued at 107,882 taels per acre, as compared to 37,863 taels of the northern area, and about 11,864 taels per acre of the eastern area. In contrast, the number of cinemas in the central area has increased since the late 1920s, which suggests that land prices were not the most critical factor in the siting of cinemas. ‘Yinian lai zhi Shanghai dichan shiye’ (Shanghai property business over the past year), in Pan, Gongbi (comp.), Nian'er zhi niansan shishi daguan (Great Views of the Current Events between 1943 and 1944) (Shanghai, 1934), vol. IGoogle Scholar.

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