Programme and Schedule

Please be advised that all the panels and talks are scheduled at British Summer Time (BST)

23 May 2022 (Day 1)

09:00-09:15

Welcome speech

09:15-10:45

panel 1:
Woman on the Post-War Screen

Chair: Lin Feng

“Bridge of Spies”: Genre, Gender and Woman Secret Agent 001 (Xuelin Zhou, University of Auckland)

The Politics of Desire: Kim Soo-yong’s Burning Mountain and Women’s Representation (Ariel Schudson, independent)

Rethinking Female Spies in Chinese Cold War Cinema: Femme Fatale, Anti-espionage Film, and Socialist Myth (Yushi Hou, University of Southampton)

Forgotten Melodrama: Girlhood and Relatability in Ayako Wakao’s Early Star Image (Lydia Brammer, University of Warwick)

10:45-11:00

Break

11:00-12:00 (Keynote speech)

Visualising a Film Past: Early Korean Cinema through the Lens of Teaching, Curating and Scholarship (Professor Kate Taylor-Jones, University of Sheffield)

12:00-13:00

Lunch break

13:00-14:30

panel 2: Space and Place

Chair: Chang Xu

Pink Film Theatres: the Theatrical Space vs Social Space (Hoi-yan Yau, Lingnan University and Heung-wah Wong, University of Hong Kong)

Landscapes in Feng Xiaogang’s Big Shot’s Funeral: An Intertextual Approach (Tianxiang Wang, National University of Ireland, Galway)

Atlas in Motion: Visualising Manchuria in Moving Images (Yufei Li, Jesus College, University of Cambridge)

Landscapes from the Margin: Ethnicity, Geopolitics, and Border-crossing in Zhang Lu’s Dooman River (Yanjie Wang, Loyola Marymount University)

14:30-14:45

Break

14:45-16:00

panel 3:
Shifting Cultures and Instruments of Forgetting in East and South-East Asian cinema

Chair: Fraser Elliott

Cinema Before Nation: Historiographical Journeys into ‘Transnational Cinema’ in Pre-war Southeast Asia (Felicia Chan, University of Manchester)

Crazy Bumpkins and City Slickers: Sowing Seeds for the Hong Kong New Wave in Shaw Brothers’ 1970s Comedies (Fraser Elliott, University of Edinburgh)

Ebola Syndrome (1996) and the Marginalisation of Popular Tastes (Andy Willis, University of Salford)

16:00-17:00

Keynote speech

The Cold War in Hong Kong Cinema [working title] (Professor Po-Shek Fu, University of Illinois)

24 May 2022 (Day 2)

09:00-10:30

Panel 4:
Style, Aesthetics and Genre Development

Chair: Chang Xu

Genre Tropes and Imagery in Japanese High School Films: Window Aesthetics in After the Rain (2018) (Peter C Pugsley, University of Adelaide)

Buried Blockbuster: Unforgetting Prophecies of Nostradamus (1974) (Guillaume Vétu, University of Adelaide)

North Korean Film Industry in the 1970s: The Rise of Juche Aesthetics in Popular Films (Jeferson Martins, Hanyang University)

A New Inception: Reintroducing Film Genres in 1980s Chinese Cinema (Stefano Locati, IULM University)

10:30-10:45

Break

10:45-12:15

panel 5:
Body, Gaze, and feminist Approach

Chair: Lin Feng

The Forgotten Sexy Bombs: The Nude Stars in Hong Kong Cinema of the 1970s (Enoch Yee-lok Tam, Lingnan University)

Gender Negotiation of the Modelled Women: Subjectivity and Empowerment in Revolutionary Model Opera Films (Hui Miao, Xi’an-Jiaotong-Liverpool University)

“I’ve Hated You, But You Are All I Have”:A Post-Feminist Examination of Girlfriend Culture in Chinese Girlhood Film (Liao Zhang-University of Nottingham)

Ma Suzhen: An Heroic Woman Takes Revenge (Paul Bevan, University of Oxford)

12:15-13:15

Lunch break

13:15-14:15

keynote speech

The Captive Audience and Albanian Films in Mao’s China (Dr Xiaoning Lu, SOAS)

14:15-14:30

Break

14:30-15:45

panel 6:
politics, censorship and popular screen culture

Chair: Lin Feng

The Film Censorship in Shanghai French Concession (1927-1943) (Weiqing Zhao-Communication University of Zhejiang)

Colonial Capitalist Melodrama: Political Critiques in Popular Hong Kong Films of the 1950s-1960s (Tom Cunliffe, UCL)

Between Carnival and Censorship: Politics of the Comedic Kung Fu Body in Chinese Cinema (Wayne Wong, University of Sheffield)

15:45-16:00

Break

16:00-17:30

panel 7:
governance, distribution, and consumption

Chair: Chang Xu

Controversies of British Film Quotas in Post-war South-East Asia (Nga Li Lam-independent)

The Forgotten Global Influence of the Zatoichi Franchise (Jonathan Wroot, University of Greenwich)

The Visibility of Local Short Film During Covid 19 Pandemic (Dyna Herlina Suwarto, University of Nottingham)

The Ways for South Korean Cinema to Cross the Border (Hyo-Jeong Lee, Southern Illinois University)

25 May 2022 (Day 3)

09:00-10:30

panel 8:
cultural identity and popular cinema

Chair: Yan Ying

The Films of Chookiat Sakveerakul and the Mainstreaming of Queer Romance in Contemporary Thai Media Culture (Thomas Baudinette, Macquarie University)

Anita: Stardom and Cultural Memory in Hong Kong Cinema (Chin-pang Lei, University of Macau)

“Spare the Brahmin”: Anxiety, Cinema, and Representation (Sudha Tiwari, UPES)

Through a Glass Brightly: The Translingual Practice in The Great Buddha+ (2017) and Classmates Minus (2020) (Yuan Li, University of Southampton)

10:30-10:45

Break

10:45-12:15

panel 9:
History, industrial infrastructure, and creative labour

Chair: Kiranmayi Indraganti

The Closeness of Close Up: Behind the Scenes of Carl Koch’s Nippon (Wayne Arnold, University of Kitakyushu and Adrian Wood, independent)

Reclaiming the Pioneering Cinema of Sai Paranjpye (working title) (Nandana Bose, independent)

One Tune, Many Languages: New multi-language Platforms of South Indian Cinema (Kiranmayi Indraganti, Srishti Manipal Institute of Art, Design and Technology)

Revisiting Kawashima Yūzō — The Forgotten Status of “The Graceful Brute” (1962) (Lukasz Mankowski, University of Warsaw)

12:15-13:15

Break

13:15-15:00

panel 10:
Representation, recreation, and reception

Chair: Chang Xu

Critical Zoom-in into the 80s. How Film Recalls Historical Event on the Screen: Collective Memories-Representation-Function, Focusing on Taxi Driver (2017) and 1987: When the Day Comes (2017) (Kyoung-Suk Sung, Kyungpook National University)

Doomed to Oblivion? Contemporary Japanese Cinema from the Perspective of Sports Film (Giacomo Calorio, University of Milan-Bicocca)

Forgetting Socialist Animation: Ma Liang and his Magic Paintbrush (Paul Kendall, University of Westminster)

15:00-15:45

Closing session

Chair: Lin Feng

Dialogue with Professor Esther Johnson on Researching Asian Cinema: Method, Collaboration, and Cross-broader Scholarship of Film History