[MGSA-L] History and Culture in Chinese and Greek Film at Michigan

Vassilios Lambropoulos vlambrop at umich.edu
Thu Mar 31 03:59:12 PDT 2016


The Modern Greek Program & The Confucius Institute at the University of Michigan continue their collaboration:


History and Culture in Chinese and Greek Film
5 PM - 7:30 PM, Thursday, March 31
Hussey Room, Michigan League, 911 N. University Ave., Ann Arbor

The U-M Confucius Institute and Modern Greek Program at the Department of Classical Studies present their 4th joint exploration of modern Chinese and Greek cultures, comparing these two countries’ rich cultures and histories in a global context. This unique collaboration examines the ways in which contemporary Chinese and Greeks engage with their history, culture, performing arts, and cinema. This year “History and Culture in Chinese and Greek Film” will be compared with two lectures and two film screenings on March 31 and April 1 respectively.

5 – 5:50 PM: “Lost Child or Lost Fatherhood?: Confucian Structure of Feeling Reinterpreted in Contemporary Chinese Language Cinema” by Jing Zhang

Filial piety and the father-son relationship constitute the core of the “Confucian structure of feeling” in traditional China. While the last two decades saw a rapid economic growth and cultural globalization in China, they also witnessed a revival of traditional values, promoted through state propaganda and education, elite discourse, popular culture, and even legalization. It is in this context that I will discuss the theme of parental love in recent Chinese language films, examining it as an inversion or reinterpretation of filial sentiment pervasive in early modern Chinese literature. I will focus on two recent films of China and Hong Kong collaboration, Dearest (2014) and Lost and Love (2015), one made by the Hong Kong director Peter Chan and the other by novelist and television screenwriter Peng Sanyuan as her directorial debut. Both films base their stories in news reports of child abduction, focus on the parents’ relentless search for their lost kids, and dramatize the multilayered tension between parental relationship, morality, and law. I will also trace the motif of “looking for a lost child/father” back to the early Modern Chinese narratives and its reincarnations in several films made at critical historical moments.

6 – 6:50 PM: “In Her Own Voice: History, Memory and Female Subjectivity in Greek Cinema” by Vassiliki Rapti, Harvard University

Within the male-dominated Greek cinema, several pioneering women directors made their appearance in the 1980s and distinguished themselves to the point that we can talk about a feminine Greek cinematic vision. This talk will focus on the distinct features of this powerful yet little known cinematic vision, and tackle female subjectivity as caught up in between History and memory. By analyzing several path-breaking films such as The Price of Love (1984) and Crystal Nights (1992) by Tonia Marketaki, Love Wanders in the Night (1981) and The Years of the Big Heat (1991) by Frieda Liappa, and Hold Me (2006) and the documentary The Aegean in the Words of Poets (2003) by Loukia Rikaki, where the personal drama is conditioned by the larger circumstances, it will show how female subjectivity is shaped by desire nurtured by memory and agency against History.

6:50 – 7:20 PM: Q and A and Discussion

Biography

Jing Zhang is Associate Professor of Chinese Language and Culture at New College of Florida. She holds a B. A. from Fudan University, a M.A. from Peking University, and a doctorate in Chinese and Comparative Literature from Washington University in St. Louis in 2007. She has taught Chinese language, classical literature, and Chinese language cinema at New College of Florida. Her research focuses on print culture, the rise of the xiaoshuo genre, ritual in literature, and literati communities in the Ming and Qing China.

Professor Vassiliki Rapti teaches Greek cinema, theatre, language and literature at Harvard University, where she is Preceptor in Modern Greek and directs the Advanced Training in Greek Poetry Translation and Performance Workshop and is the Chair of the Ludics Seminar at the Mahindra Humanities Center. She is the author of Ludics in Surrealist Theatre and Beyond (Ashgate, 2013) and of five poetry collections. Her research interests center upon cultural studies, ludic theory, literary criticism, Surrealism, 20th-century and contemporary theatre and performance, comparative literature and gender studies.

*Poster Attached

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