Chinese Media Cultures

Ying Qian

What is media and mediation? How do aesthetics, techniques and technologies of media shape perception, experience, and politics in our societies? And how have various forms of media and mediation been conceptualized and practiced in the Chinese-language environment? This graduate seminar examines critical issues in historical and contemporary Chinese media cultures, and guides students in a broad survey of primary texts, theoretical readings, and research methods that place Chinese media cultures in historical, comparative and interdisciplinary perspectives. We discuss a variety of media forms, including paintings and graphic arts, photography and cinema, soundscapes and the built environment, and television and digital media. The class covers a time span from mid-19th century to the present, and makes use of the rich holdings at the Starr East Asian Library for historical research and media archaeology.

Open to MA and PhD students. Advanced undergraduates need to have instructor's approval. Language prerequisites: intermediate or advanced Chinese; rare exceptions upon instructor’s approval.Language requirement: Intermediate to advanced Chinese. Rare exceptions approved by faculty.

Previously taught Fall 2020.