2013年6月7日

6/20 Tonan Talk by Dr. Mariam B. Lam @ CSEAS, Kyoto University

Tonan Talk by Dr. Mariam B. Lam

Date:June 20 (Thurs.), 2013, 12:00 - 14:00

Place:Tonan-tei (Room No. 201, 2nd floor of Inamori Foundation Memorial Building, CSEAS, Kyoto University

Speaker:Dr. Mariam B. Lam, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature and Southeast Asian Studies, University of California, Riverside

Title:Cultural Economic Development in the Film Industries of Viet Nam, Cambodia and Laos

Abstract:
Film scholarship on postcolonial Southeast Asia often privileges the French colonial period of the three nation-states of Việt Nam, Cambodia and Laos. Today, however, provocative cultural production and economic redevelopment is taking shape in peninsular Southeast Asia. The layered colonial and imperial histories of these three countries and this region as a whole impose certain constraints on the post-Cold War redevelopment of these national film industries, while also allowing for unique transnational innovations. Southeast Asian peninsular films and filmmakers are cross-referencing one another's economic developmental models, governmental initiatives, celebrity cross-over market potentials, connected land and aerial borders, East/West collaborations and North/South co-productions.

Bio note:
Mariam B. Lam is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Media & Cultural Studies, and Director of the Southeast Asian Studies Research Program (SEATRiP) at the University of California, Riverside. She is founding Co-Editor of the Journal of Vietnamese Studies, Chair of the Southeast Asian Archive Board at UC Irvine, and an Advisory Board Member of the University of California Humanities Research Institute. Her monograph, entitled Precariat Reckoning: Viet Nam, Post-Trauma and Strategic Affect (forthcoming, Duke UP, 2014), analyzes cultural production and community politics within and across Viet Nam, France, and the US, and she is completing work on her second book, Surfin' Southeast Asia: New Circulations of Cold War Culture and Global Capital.

Moderator:Prof. Hau Caroline (CSEAS)