20210423_Complit_The_Whole_Nation_Watching_Television_Wang_Shuo_Domestication_Rebellion_Postsocialist

Date

Apr 23 2021

Time

10:00 am

Labels

Department of Comparative Literature

Department of Comparative Literature

Center for the Study of Globalization and Cultures

“The Whole Nation Watching Television”: Wang Shuo’s Domestication of and Rebellion against Postsocialist Chinese Television

 

Date: Friday, 23 April 2021
Time: 10 AM (GMT +8)
Speaker: Dylan Suher, Society of Fellows in the Humanities, HKU

Please register at https://forms.gle/w926fXGozXCtHpV59 for Zoom Meeting ID

This talk will focus on the intersection between the evolution of the Chinese television industry in the late 1980s and early 1990s and the career of the countercultural writer and cultural entrepreneur Wang Shuo. By the late 1980s, the Chinese television industry had entered a period of crisis. A film-derived model of slow, individualized production was proving impractical for an industry trapped between rapidly increasing demand and a shortage of resources and skilled television workers. Facing these pressures, Chinese television producers and critics pushed for the adoption of a “studio drama” (shineiju) model: domestic dramas shot on one set with a multiple-camera setup in an arrangement designed to maximize production and minimize production schedules. Although Wang Shuo, a writer who had been mostly known for his subversive stories of the Beijing demimonde, might initially seem an odd fit for this genre, the shineiju allowed him to bring to the fore the undercurrent of domestic sentimentalism that had long run beneath his work. Wang initially enjoyed the wide audience and financial rewards provided by television, but he soon soured on the limitations of the industry, and would go on to write incisive deconstructions of the structure of feeling created by Chinese television. Examining this encounter reveals the intertwined ideologies and technologies underpinning the postsocialist shift in the People’s Republic toward the private home, dilemmas shared by television industries east and west, and the problems involved in building (and studying) a “popular culture.”

About the Speaker

Dylan Suher 蘇和 is a postdoctoral fellow in the Society of Fellows in the Humanities at the University of Hong Kong. He received his PhD in East Asian Languages and Civilizations from Harvard University. He is currently working on a book about how mainland Chinese writers, beginning in the late 1980s, articulated their anxieties over their changing professional identity through the media of television, film, and the internet. His areas of expertise include postsocialist mainland Chinese literature and film, Chinese television, and media theory. He has written essays and reviews of literature in translation for Asymptote, The White Review, and The Millions. For more information, please visit dylansuher.com.

Moderator: Claire Gullander-Drolet, Society of Fellows in the Humanities, HKU

Please register at the link above. The Zoom link will be sent to you a day before the event.

For enquiries, please contact Christine Vicera at viceracn@hku.hk

 

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