News & Events |
28 March 2013 | |
Lecture Dr. Steven Chung Time: 3:30 - 5:20pm |
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Over the past three decades, South Korea has experienced a dramatic change, shifting from a largely homogeneous population overseen by militaristic political regimes to an increasingly multi-ethnic society governed by an ostensibly democratic system. South Korean cinema has undergone a corresponding revision, making visible a range of figures – ethnic minorities, the disabled, political refugees, etc. – that are wholly new, marginalized or heretofore invisible on film. These new figures, predominantly, are made visible through melodramatic narratives and romantic themes, arguably the dominant modalities of South Korean cinema. This lecture explores the significance of these social and cinematic transformations, concentrating on a central tension: how, on the one hand, the radical difference of the newly visible figures is contained by melodramatic love stories and, on the other, the excesses of melodrama sometimes push the new figures into a critique of the very terms of their marginalization. Short bio; |