• Home
  • About CCS
  • News
  • Events
  • Keywords
  • People
    • Executive Committee
    • Advisory Board
    • Affiliated Members
    • Members
  • Research and Other Projects
  • Contact
  • Subscribe us
  • Home
  • About CCS
  • News
  • Events
  • Keywords
  • People
    • Executive Committee
    • Advisory Board
    • Affiliated Members
    • Members
  • Research and Other Projects
  • Contact
  • Subscribe us
Facebook Instagram
The Centre for Cultural Studies -The Centre for Cultural Studies -
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Home
  • About CCS
  • News
  • Events
  • Keywords
  • People
    • Executive Committee
    • Advisory Board
    • Affiliated Members
    • Members
  • Research and Other Projects
  • Contact
  • Subscribe us
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.

Don’t Look Now: The Nanjing Massacre and its Photographic Afterlives

arkochan
Last updated: 2023 年 7 月 25 日 pm 1:22
Last updated: 2023 年 7 月 25 日
3 Min Read
Share
SHARE

Date: 2020.4.18 (Saturday, Hong Kong Time)
Time: 4pm – 6pm Hong Kong Time (9am – 11am London Time)
Venue: Online Public Lecture (on Zoom)

 

Speaker
Prof. Margaret Hillenbrand
Modern Chinese Literature and Culture, University of Oxford

—

About the Speaker

Prof. Margaret Hillenbrand is Associate Professor of Modern Chinese Literature and Culture at the University of Oxford.

Abstract

This talk explores the afterlives of the Nanjing Massacre, focussing on its infamous photographic record of beheaded men and violated women. As signifiers of national cataclysm, these images of atrocity have a certain ubiquity in China today, where they constitute the heart and soul of patriotic discourse. Indeed, their prominence is such that it is easy to forget that these stills of rape and murder were sequestered state artefacts for decades. Yet in the mid-1990s, partly in response to the turmoil which followed the crackdown at Tiananmen in 1989, the atrocity images were released and briskly circulated, firstly via commemorative albums, and then in popular histories, exhibitionary culture, websites, films, paintings, reportage, graphic art, and videogaming. This talk examines explores how these retooled photographs have spread the-once-was-secret far and wide, mostly by repurposing the same core cache of ultra-violent images. Over time, these remediated images have codified Massacre memorial into a fixed visual language, an ocular shorthand, a set of logos even, designed to embed a synaptic set of patriotic responses. Whatever their stated purpose, I show that these reworked photographs have also inaugurated new modes of secrecy about the Massacre. Retooling grotesque perpetrator images as nationalistic propaganda (often displayed to children), these remediations confine the Massacre – whose trauma will always confound stark visual reckoning – to a continuing place of interdiction and the unsayable.

 

Moderator
Prof. Pang Laikwan
Cultural and Religious Studies, The Chinese University of Hong Kong

—

Conducted in English.
All are welcome.

Website: www.cuhk.edu.hk/crs/ccs
Enquiry: cuccs@cuhk.edu.hk

Please register on or before 16 April 2020 (Hong Kong Time): https://forms.gle/q24Xmxf5ScUD493QA

and Join Zoom Meeting at: https://cuhk.zoom.us/j/8302985461

Organized by the Centre for Cultural Studies, Department of Cultural and Religious Studies, CUHK

Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link Print

Search Post

Event Categories

  • Book Talks
  • Conferences
  • Dialogues in Research
  • Forums
  • Others
  • Parallel Texts, Intersecting Conversations
  • Public Lectures
  • Screenings
  • Seminar
  • Symposia
  • Workshops

Information for

  • Prospective students
  • Jobs
  • Partners and business
  • Media
  • Conference organisers
  • Term dates

Top links

  • Visit Academy
  • Foxiz and the EU
  • Outlook 365 web access
  • Library
  • Move Foxiz
  • Term dates

Students

  • Foxiz Students
  • Foxiz College Union
  • Student Hub
  • Careers Service
  • Foxiz Mobile
  • Graduation

Staff

  • Staff Main Page
  • HR Procedures
  • Salaries
  • Pension Schemes
  • Research Support
  • Information for New Staff

Quick Link

  • My Bookmark
  • Interests
  • Contact Us
  • Blog Index
  • Complaint
  • Advertise
Centre for Cultural Studies Department of Cultural and Religious Studies The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Room 212, Leung Kau Kui Building, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin

Tel: (852) 3943 1255

Follow Us

  • Copyright © 文化研究中心 Centre For Cultural Studies, Privacy Statement Terms and Conditions.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?