Yale Kempf Lecture | Youngmin Choe, Associate Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures

Event time: 
Thursday, April 20, 2023 - 3:30pm
Location: 
Room, 136 Humanities Quadrangle See map
320 York St
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

Porous Media and Viscous Extractions

States of compression and acceleration are often used conceptually to refer to the rapid modernization of some Asian nations. South Korea’s “compressed modernity” and China’s “globalization on speed” capture the fast pace of industrial change, inferring not only an economic condition but also a “civilizational” one of intense social and cultural pressure on the human body to conform to the demands of the labor market. The history of “compressed modernity” in South Korea is generally conceived in socio-economic terms, continuing into a “post-compressed modernity.” These states of compression and acceleration tend to be conceptualized in terms of time and space. But compression also refers to a material process and condition that when exerted hits a maximal yield or stress point, and surprisingly, this has not been a part of the discourse of compressed modernity. This talk will explore decompression as a critical act and counter-discourse to compressed modernity, focusing on porosity and viscous matter. Beginning at the surface with cutaneous membranes and skin as interface, it discusses media art’s engagement with skin technologies, and skincare as a kind of technological medium. On a deeper level, it will examine the extraction of viscous matter from bodies with a focus on the Netflix series, The School Nurse Files (2020) written and directed by the film director Yi Kyoungmi, based on the science fiction writer Chung Serang’s novel.

Bio:

Youngmin Choe is associate professor of Korean Cinema and Visual Culture at the University of Southern California. She is the author of Tourist Distractions: Traveling and Feeling in Transnational Hallyu Cinema (Duke University Press, 2016) and co-editor of The Korean Popular Culture Reader (Duke University Press, 2014). Her book on Kim Ki-young’s film Hanyo (The Housemaid, 1960), will be published in the BFI Film Classics series (Bloomsbury). Her current book project, Craft Media: Materiality, Mediation, and the Decompression of Compressed Modernity is a recipient of an Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Book Grant. Choe’s articles have appeared in film and media journals including Cinema Journal, positions: east asia cultures critique, and the Journal of Japanese and Korean Cinema.