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Title: Seeing Is Finding Different Perspectives: no


1
Seeing Is FindingDifferent Perspectives no
happing ending for the monolithic viewerRujie
WangCollege of Wooster
2
Four Problem Areas
  • The purpose of art
  • Aesthetic and narrative styles
  • Race matters
  • English subtitles

3
Differing Purposes of Art and Life
  • Art for arts sake or as a vehicle of change
  • Art as entertainment or as representation of life
    (social reality)
  • Anthropocentrism (teleology) versus Chinese
    cosmology (meaningful coincidences)
  • Western humanism and Eastern religion

4
How views differ between U.S. and other cultures
  • Commenting on a screenplay by Ken Kesey, Arthur
    Miller said that it revealed the American faith
    in the infinite possibility of growth for the
    individual person, and that its theme was a
    quintessentially American belief that despair
    is still for us a kind of frontier to be crossed
    when in other places in the world it is a
    permanent condition of life.
  • Arthur Miller, American playwright

5
Chinese Literary Thought and Chinese Cinema
  • First, whereas in Western expressive theories the
    creative character of the imagination is of
    central importance, Chinese expressive theorists,
    with a few exceptions like Lu Chi and Liu Hsieh,
    seldom emphasize creativity. For example, whereas
    Coleridge describes the Secondary Imagination
    (the artistic imagination) as the faculty that
    dissolves, diffuses, dissipates, in order to
    recreate, and Wordsworth likewise asserts, The
    imagination also shapes and creates, similar
    statements are hardly ever found in Chinese
    expressive theories. This difference may be due
    to, as I suggested earlier, the absence in
    traditional Chinese philosophy of the concept of
    an anthropomorphic deity as the Creator of the
    world, in contrast to the Judaeo-Christian
    concept of God the Creator, which provided a
    model for the concept of the artist as creator.
  • James Liu, Chinese Theories of Literature, Univ.
    of Chicago Press, 1975, p.87

6
The World as A Moral or Natural Universe
  • The late Dr. Hu Shih, eminent historian of
    Chinese thought and culture, used to say with sly
    delight that centuries of Christian missionaries
    had been frustrated and chagrined by the apparent
    inability of Chinese to take sin seriously. Were
    we to work out fully all the consequences for
    Chinese society of the model offered by an
    organismic cosmos functioning through the
    dynamism of harmony, we might well be able to
    relate the absence of a sense of sin to it. For
    in such a cosmos there can be no parts wrongfully
    present everything that exists belongs, even if
    no more appropriately than as the consequence of
    a temporary imbalance, a disharmony. Evil as a
    positive or active force cannot exist much less
    can it be frighteningly personified.
  • ____ Frederick W. Mote, Intellectual
    Foundations of China
  • Princeton University Press, 1989. p.21

7
Values, Attitudes, and Histories
  • But in India, it despotism is normal for here
    there is no sense of personal independence with
    which a state of despotism could be compared, and
    which would raise revolt in the soul nothing
    approaching even a resentful protest against it,
    is left, except the corporeal smart, and the pain
    of being deprived of absolute necessaries and of
    pleasure. In the case of such a people,
    therefore, that which we call history is not to
    be looked for. This Hinduism makes them
    incapable of writing history all that happens is
    dissipated in their minds into confused dreams.
  • ___ Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, The Philosophy
    of History, Dover, 1956 pp.161-2

8
For instance, the Frenchman Maupassants Une vie
is human literature about the animal passions of
man Chinas Prayer Mat of Flesh, however, is a
piece of non-human literature. The Russian
Kuprins novel Jama is literature describing the
lives of prostitutes, but Chinas Nine-tailed
Tortoise is non-human literature. The difference
lies merely in the different attitudes conveyed
by the work, one is dignified and one is
profligate one has aspirations for human life
and therefore feels grief and anger in the face
of inhuman life, whereas the other is complacent
about human life, and the author even seems to
derive a feeling of satisfaction from it, and in
many cases to deal with his material in an
attitude of amusement and provocation. In one
simple sentence the difference between human and
non-human literature lies in the attitude that
informs the writing whether it affirms human
life or inhuman life. Humane Literature by
Zhou Zuoren in Modern Chinese Literary Thought.
ed. Kirk Denton. Stanford UP, 1996. Pp.155-6
9
Chen Duxiu, leader of Chinese Communist Party
  • Chinese literature today is lifeless and stale,
    unable to stand next to that of Europe. . . . .
    The problem of Confucianism has been attracting
    much attention in the nation this is the first
    indication of the revolution in ethics and
    morality. ... The classical literature is pompous
    and pedantic and has lost the principles of
    expressiveness and realistic description.
    Eremitic literature is highly obscure and
    abstruse and is self-satisfied writing that
    provides no benefit to the majority of its
    readers. In form, Chinese literature has followed
    old precedents it has flesh without bones and
    body without soul. It is a decorative and not a
    practical product. In content, its vision does
    not go beyond kings, officials, spirits, ghosts,
    and the fortunes or misfortunes of individuals.
    As for the universe, or human life, or
    society--they are simply beyond its ken. Such are
    the common failings of these three kinds of
    literature.
  • _______Chen Duxiu On Literary Revolution, p.144

10
Aesthetic and Narrative Styles
  • How life is understood affects the way human
    stories are told
  • Cultural values and attitudes are embedded in the
    narrative patterns of history and literature
    (film)
  • Differing emphases create modes of representation
    and aesthetic styles

11
Story as Event
  • This is the fact that, despite our easy
    acceptance of the commonsense premise that
    narrative is that branch of literature which
    relates a sequence of human events, it is
    precisely in the area of defining the event as
    an existential unit that we find a wide
    divergence of conceptual models from culture to
    culture.
  • _____ Andrew Plaks, Chinese Narrative. Princeton
    University Press,1977. p.314.

12
Narrative Patterns in the Classical Novel
  • The ubiquitous potential presence of a balanced,
    totalized, dimension of meaning may partially
    explain why a fully realized sense of the tragic
    does not materialize in Chinese narrative. ....
    But in each case the implicit understanding of
    the logical interrelation between these fictional
    characters' particular situation and the overall
    structure of existential intelligibility serves
    to blunt the pity and fear the reader experiences
    as he witnesses their individual destinies. In
    other words, Chinese narrative is replete with
    individuals in tragic situations, but the secure
    inviolability of the underlying affirmation of
    existence in its totality precludes the
    possibility of the individual's tragic fate
    taking on the proportions of a cosmic tragedy.
    Instead, the bitterness of the particular case of
    mortality ultimately settles back into ceaseless
    alternation of patterns of joy and sorrow,
    exhilaration and despair, which go to make up an
    essentially affirmative view of the universe of
    experience.
  • Andrew Plaks, Ibid. Pp.351-2

13
Race Matters
  • Orientalism
  • (film as ethnography)
  • ways in which Chinese and/or Asians appear in
    Western works of imagination according to racial
    stereotypes

14
Rey Chow
  • The production of images is the production not
    of things but of relations, not of one culture
    but of value between cultures even as we see
    'Chinese' stories on the screen, we are still
    confronted with an exchange between 'China' and
    the west in which these stories seek their
    market.
  • _______ Primitive Passions.
  • Columbia University Press, 1995. p.60.

15
Orientalism in Broken BlossomsChinese as
emasculated and asexual
16
Orientalism in Good EarthChinese as backward but
kind-hearted
17
Film as Auto-ethnography
  • Orientals Orientalism ways in which Chinese
    reinvent themselves as they are perceived in the
    West

18
New Year Sacrifice, dir. Xia Yan, 1956cultural
rituals against women
19
Self-Reinvention as sexually potent and full of
primitive passion in Red Sorghum
20
Raise the Red Lantern, dir. Zhang Yimou,
1991exoticization of women and concubinage
21
Red Sorghum, dir. Zhang Yimou, 1991exoticization
of primitive peasants
22
Ermo, dir. Zhou Xiaowen, 1996exoticization of
primitive peasants
23
Old Well, dir. Wu Tianming, 1987primitive
existence and savagery
24
Farewell My Concubine, dir. Chen Kaige,
1993physical abuse and brutality against children
25
Farewell My Concubinephysical abuse and
brutality against children
26
Farewell My Concubinephysical abuse and
brutality against children
27
Sheldon Xiaopeng Lu
  • The end result of Zhang's film art may seem to
    be his ability to tell the Western audience
    enchanting, exotic stories about the other
    country 'China' through stunning visual images.
    He has offered the Western viewer a museum of
    precious Chinese objects, costumes, and
    artifacts. He has presented a dazzling array of
    icons and symbols of his 'China' green sorghum
    field, red sorghum wine, colorful strips of
    cloth, dye mill, red lanterns, red pepper, and
    puppet show. He has told lurid stories of murder,
    incest, polygamy, and concubinage. He has
    rendered on screen masquerades of terrifying
    political events such as the Great Leap Forward
    and the Cultural Revolution. All these spectacles
    have been masterfully manufactured for the
    pleasure and gaze of the Western viewer.
  • Sheldon Hsiao-peng Lu. Transnational Chinese
    Cinema. University of Hawaii Press, 1997. p.126.

28
Sheldon Xiaopeng Lu
  • Some films achieve a transnational status
    precisely because they are seen as possessing an
    authentically 'national' 'Chinese' 'Oriental'
    flavor by Western audiences. In the meantime, the
    domestic Chinese audience dismisses the same
    films as 'misrepresentations' and
    'mystifications' of China."
  • Ibid. p.12.

29
Rey Chow Primitive Passions
  • Although Zhang (Yimou) may think that he is
    making films about China, what he is doing is
    representing a timeless China of the past, which
    is given to us in an imagined because
    retrospective mode. The China, which is signified
    mythically, is the China constructed by
    modernitythe modernity of anthropology,
    ethnography, and feminism. It is also a China
    exaggerated and caricatured, in which the past is
    melodramatized in the form of excessive and
    absurd rituals and customs. p.145

30
Montage, Speech, and Subtitles
  • Film language versus speech
  • Does action speak louder than words?
  • Do written words stand in the way of action?
  • Accents, dialects, and meanings of the written
    word what is lost in translation (English
    subtitles)

31
Sergei Eisenstein, Russian film director
  • The first experimental work with sound must be
    directed along the line of its distinct
    non-synchronization with the visual images.
  • _____Film Theory and Criticism
  • by Gerald Mast p.318.

32
Ju Dou, dir. Zhang Yimou, 1990philosophy and
personal names
33
Comrades, Almost A Love Storydir. Peter Chan,
1996cultural identities and dialects
34
In the Heat of the Sundir. Jiang Wen,
1993philosophy and personal names
35
City of Sadness, dir. Hou Xiaoxian, 1989cultural
identities and dialects
36
Roland Barthes, French linguist and thinkerTo
understand a narrative is not merely to follow
the unfolding of the story, it is also to
recognize its construction in storeys, to
project the horizontal concatenation of the
narrative thread on to an implicitly vertical
axis. To read (to listen to) a narrative is not
merely to move from one word to the next, it is
also to move from one level to the
next. ______ Image-Music-Text. trans.
Stephen Heath. New York Hill and Wang,
1977. p. 87.
37
Conclusion
  • There is not unmediated perception and the
    narrative films we teach are never
    self-explanatory. For these films to be read as
    signs, we have to put in place systems of meaning
    according to which moving images are organized.
    "Since every sign supposes a code," says Roland
    Barthes, "it is this code that one should try to
    establish. The photographic paradox can then be
    seen as the co-existence of two messages, the one
    without a code, the other with a code."
  • ________ Roland Barthes, Ibid. p.19.
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