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Hi, everyone, we are so thankful to Youngmin Lee for having taken time out from 
his administrative responsibilities at the Busan International Film Festival to 
post to everyone from Busan.  While his interests in the visual theories of 
Lacan might be familiar to the majority of empyreans, I think it's important to 
appreciate Youngmin's efforts to translate Western theoretical thought into the 
Asian media discourse, which is extremely complicated and multilayed by 
cultural convergences.   I'm somewhat suprised not to have heard reservations 
about some of you regarding the relevance of Lacan's visual theories to the new 
media context -- not too late....

On the same panel today, for example, one Korean colleague translated the film, 
Avatar, as a Buddhist allegory while another addressed very similar visual 
conditions in a Russian sic-fi film in relation to the Foucauldian panopticon 
and procedures of subjugation (for which Avatar has faced severe criticism for 
what some understand as its endorsement of primitivism).

What's been interesting to me throughout the panels and screenings at Busan is 
how the overall Asian film community seems to be missing the opportunity to 
capitalize on the pluses of new media, from interactivity to networked 
relations to the exhibitional convergence of multiple screens and platforms 
[which is not dissimilar to what would be heard at Cannes, the Occidental 
equivalant of Busan].  While yesterday featured a panel on digital 
communication, this ended up being an endorsement of search engines and deep 
data for advertising and audience development --  a far cry from endorsing a 
convergence of cinematic and new media habits and techniques.  While it's 
understandable that a major film festival would promote conventional business 
models, it's disheartening that the Asian "independents" seem to work 
indifferently to so many of their Asian peers who lead the new media arts (and 
this in the land of Nam June Paik -- one of Paik's sculptures even graces the 
lobby of Seoul
  airport hotel where we slept off our first night of jet lag). 

Yet, Renate and I have enjoyed two films that seem to thrive on such 
convergences.  The Korean director Bong Joon-ho screened his extraordinary 
film, Snowpiercer, which tells an eerie and violent tale of social upheaval in 
the new postglobal warming ice age, as the survivors circle the globe in a 
hierarchically ordered train, with a marvelous performance by Tilda Swinton.  
The marvel is how the film successfully cut between dazzling animated sequences 
of the train crashing through icebergs and the traditional analogue 
representation of the diegesis. We enjoyed the flipside of this tonight while 
watching Japanese director Akira Ikeda's Anatomy of a Paper Clip (a miminalist 
sado-masochistic portrayal of class abjection in which directing evoked a 
combination of realist miminalism and pared down animation).  While the film 
contained no animation until the credits, the actors every movements seemed to 
embody the craft of top-motion animation as nuanced in the digital scene.

Today we also enjoyed the dialogue between this week's guest, Youngmin Lee, and 
next week's featured guest, Alex Taek-Gwang Lee.  It'll be very interesting to 
hear how Alex weighs into the discussion.

Of course, we're very anxious to hear the thoughts of empyreans throughout the 
month.

Best,

Tim
Director, Society for the Humanities
Curator, Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media Art
Professor of Comparative Literature and English
A. D. White House
Cornell University
Ithaca, New York. 14853
________________________________________
From: empyre-boun...@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au 
[empyre-boun...@lists.cofa.unsw.edu.au] on behalf of Renate Ferro 
[r...@cornell.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2013 1:40 AM
To: soft_skinned_space
Subject: [-empyre-] Fwd:  Welcome to the October Discussion:

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