Critical Chinese Humanities Lecture Series
Organized by the Department East Asian Language and Cultures (EALAC) and co-sponsored by CCM.
A lecture by Weihong Bao, Pamela P. Fong and Family Distinguished Chair in China Studies and an Associate Professor of Film and Media, UC Berkeley
"Cybernetics of Influence: Set Design in the Age of Television"
This talk considers "influence" as an atmospheric notion of media that binds mind and society at the onset of the Cold War and the rise of television. Influence, in this context, does not entail a one-way traffic but a structure of interdependence, relying on a new notion of set design that orchestrates a system of responses and reactions that produces resonances and dissonances, signal and noise. Situated in the early era of the People's Republic (1949-) in the decade between the ideological campaign of Thought Reform (1951–1952) and the Great Leap Forward (1958-1962) movement, I examine how the "cool media" of television (McLuhan) reconfigures set design through a new set of technological and human assembly. With this framework, I return to the site of television production, not as the origin of signal dissemination, but the doe where issues of transmission, amplification, and reception inform and shape the very production process. Probing the influencing machinery and aesthetics of television in connection with other media, my talk highlights the tension intrinsic to influence caught between a climatic regime of power and aesthetic operations of resonances, between spatial-temporal axes of enclosure and porosity, stasis and motion.