Speaker
Ma Ran | Associate Professor, Japan-in-Asia Cultural Studies Program & Screen Studies Program, Nagoya University, Japan; HYI Visiting Scholar, 2023-24
Chair/Discussant
Jie Li | Professor of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, Harvard University
Co-sponsored with the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies and the Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies
Spanning the late 1970s and early 1990s, a series of coproduced documentaries featuring Japanese entities in consistent partnership with China Central Television (CCTV), have emerged. Emblematic of the Sino-Japanese “techno-friendship,” these projects launched spectacular trans-China voyages undertaken by transnational film and television teams along the routes and territories across the Silk Road, the Yangtze River, and the Yellow River. They arguably constitute an epistemological-technological nexus, enabling CCTV crews to explore “what could be documentary(-making)” through/out the location shooting, and simultaneously allowing Japanese teams to gain privileged access to locations and infrastructural networks, thereby constructing their multilayered Sino-fantasy, underpinned by a documentary epistephilia toward Chinese histories, cultural heritages, and post-Cultural Revolution conditions of the PRC.
This talk highlights the Great Wall project in this line-up, encompassing CCTV’s Wang Changcheng (Odyssey of the Great Wall) and Tokyo Broadcasting System Television (TBS)’s Banri no chōjō (the Great Wall); both aired in 1991. I contemplate this project’s dis/continuation of the techno-friendship mode. CCTV and TBS have used their journeys along the Great Wall territories to work through disparate landscape-affective assemblages while negotiating East Asian (post-)Cold War geopolitics. While Banri no chōjō’s Sino-fantasy is drastically reterritorialized by its studio-staged reportage on the Tiananmen Incident, Wang Changcheng reinvents a self-scrutinizing gaze upon “China” in the aftermath of Tian’anmen, innovatively realigning the political aesthetics of documentary (jilupian).
Upcoming Events
Visiting Scholar Talks
Can Korean Calligraphers Write Like Wang Xizhi? The Mujangsa Stele and its Reception in a Sino-Korean ContextMonday, November 25, 2024
Visiting Scholar Talks
Understanding Human Emotion and the Emergence of the Aesthetic Subject in ZhuangziThursday, December 5, 2024
Visiting Scholar Talks
Global Cold War and Local Struggle: The View from Stories of North Vietnamese Women during the Vietnam WarFriday, December 6, 2024