Yenching Institute: Plasmatic Empire: Animated Filmmaking in the Manchukuo Film Association, 1937-1945

Date: 

Tuesday, December 5, 2017, 12:00pm to 1:30pm

Location: 

Common Room, 2 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA

Speaker: Daisy Yan Du, Assistant Professor, Division of Humanities, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology; HYI Visiting Scholar
Chair/discussant: Jie Li, Assistant Professor of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, Harvard University

For more information on the talk, please view here

This talk examines animated filmmaking in the Manchukuo Film Association (Manying, 1937-1945), which played an important role in shaping wartime film culture in Northeast China and other Japanese-occupied areas such as North China and Shanghai. Some studies have been conducted on Manying films, but they have focused on documentaries, newsreels, and fictional live-action films, and do not systematically address the cinematic form of animation. Since animation is a different medium, an in-depth study of it will provide a unique perspective from which to understand Manying and the complicated wartime culture of Manchukuo, China, and Japan. The major theoretical problem that this talk tries to address is the convoluted relationship between animation and politics. On the one hand, animation, often regarded as a fantasy art form intended for an audience of children, is widely known for its escapist and apolitical tendencies as it features fairytales, folklore, and talking animals. On the other hand, animation, due to its kinship with caricature and cartoon, can be used as a powerful weapon to disseminate ideologies to both children and adults. In a politically fraught time when the non-political could be highly politicized, how do we locate and dislocate Manying and its animation on the spectrum between escapism and political propaganda?

Animated films to be screened during the talk:
Terrible Lice (Kepa de shizi, 1943, in Chinese)
Dreaming to be Emperor (Huangdi meng, 1947, in Chinese)
Capturing the Turtle in the Jar (Wengzhong zhuobie, 1948, in Chinese)

Harvard-Yenching Institute lunch talk