#WontBeErased: Protecting LGBTQ Youth from Conversion Therapy

In this fire-chat series, nuclear scientist Sam Brinton from the US will share his personal journey in undergoing gay conversion therapy when he was young.  He will discuss the challenges he faced and how homophobia has impacted him.  He has now transformed that traumatic experience into a positive experience and influences other people to combat homophobia.  Sam has been an important voice in the LGBTQ movement in US and will also share his experience in activism.

About Sam:

Sam is currently the Head of Advocacy and Government Affairs of the Trevor Project, an organisation providing crisis intervention and suicide prevention services to LGBTQ young people under 25. Being a nuclear scientist and queer activist and from helping people to understand the differences in advanced nuclear reactors to the dangerous practices of anti-gay conversion therapy, Sam has the passion to change the world.  This brings him to speak before the United Nations and the US Congress etc.  He has also been featured in interviews with TIME, The Guardian and many others. 

More about IDAHOT:

Held every year on May 17, IDAHOT draws the attention of policymakers, opinion leaders, social movers and shakers, the general public and the media to the violence and discrimination experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT+) people globally.

The theme of IDAHOT 2019 is “Biphobia”. From now until May 17, Pink Alliance will be organizing a series of events to help educate the public and increase their understanding of this issue. By distributing pamphlets, we wish to promote the understanding of “Bi+Pan” sexuality. By conducting other outreach activities, including talks on gay conversion therapy by the U.S. queer activist Sam Brinton, a theatre workshop entitled “The Same, Not The Same?”, a photography / art exhibition by local Bi artists, and school talks on IDAHOT, we hope to further raise awareness of the prejudice faced by bisexuals in both the general and queer communities.

Moderators: Dr Alvin Wong and Dr Brenda Alegre

Date: Monday 6 May 2019

Time: 3:00-4:30pm

Venue: 4.36, 4/F, Run Run Shaw Tower, Centennial Campus, HKU

The Flavors and Feelings of China’s New Youth: Capitalist Soft Power and the Rise of a Global Technological Society

This talk examines from a post-Marxist perspective the tremendous generation gap that has opened in China with the start of the 90’s generation and which now includes the 00’s as well. After detailing a number of associated phenomena, it examines the likely causes of these developments, including especially market reforms and soft power. It discusses the concerns and responses these changes have provoked among policymakers, educators and parents. It concludes by focusing on growing tensions between sometimes conflicting policies and reactions to them, and speculates on longer-term implications.

About the speaker:

Josef Gregory Mahoney, PhD, is Professor of Politics at East China Normal University (ECNU); Executive Director of the International Center for Advanced Political Studies (ECNU); Founder and Director of the International Graduate Program in Politics (ECNU); and Associate Editor of the US-based Journal of Chinese Political Science (SSCI). In addition to scholarly publications, he’s a regular contributor to ICS, ShenzhenTV, CCTV, CGTN, BBC and CRI news programs. He was a member of the Chinese team that translated Jiang Zemin’s Selected Works into English and a Senior Researcher with the Central Compilation and Translation Bureau (中共中央编译局).

Date: Thursday 2 May 2019

Time: 4-6pm

Venue: 7.58, 7/F, Sir Run Run Shaw Tower, Centennial Campus, HKU

All are welcome.

For enquiries, please contact Christine Vicera at viceracn@hku.hk

Made in China 4.1: Smashing the Bell Jar

Smashing the Bell Jar: Shades of Gender in China

Sun and moon have no light left, earth is dark;
Our women’s world is sunk so deep, who can help us?
Jewelry sold to pay this trip across the seas,
Cut off from my family I leave my native land.
Unbinding my feet I clean out a thousand years of poison,
With heated heart arouse all women’s spirits.
Alas, this delicate kerchief here
Is half stained with blood, and half with tears.
Qiu Jin, 1904 (translated by Jonathan Spence)

As she bode farewell to China in the summer of 1904, early revolutionary Qiu Jin penned these words to bemoan the fate of herself and of uncountable Chinese women. She was leaving behind her husband—whom she had married out of obligation—and two young children to go to study in Japan. Having returned to China, she would continue to engage in revolutionary activities, and was ultimately beheaded by the Qing authorities in July 1907 at the age of 31. Martyrdom made her into a legend. More than a century later, bound feet belong to another age and kerchieves stained with blood and tears have become an overused trope in revolutionary literature. Still, Qiu Jin’s spirit is more alive than ever in a whole new generation of Chinese feminists who are fighting for women’s rights—a renewed attempt to smash the bell jar of China’s patriarchal society.

This issue of the Made in China Journal offers a series of perspectives on the plight and struggles of women and sexual minorities in today’s China. In the special section, Dušica Ristivojević reflects on how Anglophone media have been reporting on women’s activism in China over the past three decades and the implications of such coverage for our understanding of the phenomenon. Yige Dong considers the class composition of the Young Feminist Activism in China, asking whether this movement is really an elitarian urban project or if it represents a feminist movement from the left. Nuala Gathercole Lam in conversation with feminist activist Zhang Leilei discusses the dynamics that led to the emergence of a #MeToo movement in China, as well as the shortcomings of the campaign. Séagh Kehoe argues for increased attention and social mobilisation to address the complex and often brutal ways in which gender and ethnicity overlap in China, in particular in the borderland areas of Tibet and Xinjiang. Feminist activistZheng Churan recounts her relationship with her husband Wei Zhili, detained at the end of March for assisting migrant workers affected by pneumoconiosis. Tiantian Zheng looks back at the plight of sex workers in China since the beginning of the economic reforms, highlighting the tragic consequences of the existing repressive policies. Nicola Macbean describes the ‘accidental’ activism of the wifes of rights protection lawyers arrested in the crackdown of July 2015. Finally,Bao Hongwei in conversation with leading queer feminist filmmaker He Xiaopei talks about the formation of queer identities, communities, and activism in China since the 1990s.

The issue includes op-eds on the rise of transnational carceral capitalism in Xinjiang by Gerald Roche; the latest crackdown on labour activists by Kevin Lin; the implications of the recent detention of the former Interpol chief Meng Hongwei by Maya Wang; the ethical and practical risks that Western universities face in dealing with China by James Darrowby; and the role of ideology in Xi Jinping’s China by Christian Sorace. In the China columns section, Jie Yang looks into the workings of ‘hidden norms’ in the Chinese bureaucracy and how they affect the psychological well-being of Chinese officials. Jude Blanchette traces the history of the policies adopted by the Chinese Communist Party to exert influence within private companies in China. Finally, Robert Walker and Yang Lichao analyse a recent official report that offers an assessment of progress in poverty reduction and candidly discusses contradictions within the current strategy.

The Window on Asia section offers two essays. Milford Bateman, Nithya Natarajan, Katherine Brickell, and Laurie Parsons discuss the consequences of the expansion of Cambodia’s already microcredit sector, where indebted people have been forced to accept exploitative labour conditions in the garment and construction industries and, in the worst cases, have been forced to sell themselves as bonded labour to brick kilns owners. Yi Xiaocuo analyses a new Sino-Kazakh coproduction that recounts the time that celebrated Chinese musician Xian Xinghai spent in Kazakhstan in early 1942, shedding light on the dark side of the cooperation between China and Kazakhstan under the aegis of the Belt and Road Initiative. In the cultural section, Martina Caschera reanimates the artistic production of Lu Zhixiang, a master cartoonist whose work offered insight into the plight of the underclasses in Shanghai in the 1930s, and Zeng Jinyan and Tan Jia talk with director Wang Nanfu about her documentary Hooligan Sparrow.We wrap up the issue with a conversation with Daniel Vukovich about Illiberal China, his latest book on the idological challenges that China poses to liberal values and ideas.The EditorsIvan Franceschini (ivan.franceschini@anu.edu.au) and Nicholas Loubere

We Have Boots: A Film Screening and Q&A with Director Evans Chan

We Have Boots is a moving sequel to Raise the Umbrellas, featuring young activists, Agnes Chow, Ray Wong, Alex Chow, Tommy Cheung; artist Kacey Wong; legislator Shiu Ka-chun; and Occupy initiators, Benny Tai and Chan Kin-man. In the post-Umbrella era of disqualification and prosecution, they reflect on their personal paths – from pursuing graduate studies or seeking political asylum overseas, to accepting the political cost of dissent by confronting the prospect of imprisonment. “Affecting… intellectual discussions blending into the melancholic meditative space of post-Occupy Hong Kong… [We Have Boots is a film] about holding on to hope despite despair.” (HKOI, 14/1/19)

About the Director:

Evans Yiu Shing Chan is a New York- and Hong Kong-based critic, librettist and an independent filmmaker of more than a dozen fiction and documentary films, which have been screened around the world. His directorial debut To Liv(e)(1991) was listed by Time Out as one of the 100 Greatest Hong Kong Films. A critical anthology about his work, Postcolonalism, Diaspora, and Alternative Histories: The Cinema of Evans Chan was published by the HKU Press in 2015. We Have Boots is the sequel to his acclaimed documentary Raise the Umbrellas (2016).

Date: Tuesday 23 April 2019
Time: 5:30-8pm
Venue: CPD 3.04, Sir Run Run Shaw Tower, Centennial Campus, HKU

All are welcome.

Global Sexualities: Weimar Berlin and the Birth of a Global Sexology

In March 1919, Magnus Hirschfeld, a pioneering sexologist and homosexual rights activist, opened the Institute of Sexual Science in central Berlin. Recognized as the first of its kind, the Institute became an international magnet, attracting both medical professionals and curious visitors from all over Europe, the Americas, and East Asia. Until Nazis destroyed the Institute in the spring of 1933, Hirschfeld and his colleagues conducted research and counseled patients. This included personalized advice on birth control, on sexual intimacy, and on strategies for coping with homosexual desire. For male and female cross-dressers, who adopted what today might be described as trans identities, the Institute pioneered hormonal treatments and gender confirmation surgery. Members of the Institute not only published their research in scientific journals but also popularized their work in print and film media. Despite its relatively brief twelve-year existence, the Berlin Institute became a global inspiration for future such programs, including the American Kinsey Institute, founded in 1947.

Date: Thursday, 18th April, 2019
Time: 6-7:30 PM
Venue: 4.36, 4/f Sir Run Run Shaw Tower, Centennial Campus, HKU

Speaker’s bio:

Dr. Robert Beachy received his PhD in European history at the University of Chicago in 1998. He has taught at Wake Forest University, Goucher College, and since 2014 as Associate Professor of History at Underwood International College of Yonsei University.  He is the recipient of numerous fellowships and prizes, including a John S. Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship, residential fellowships at the National Humanities Center (Duke, NC), and the Center for the Advanced Study of the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University. Dr. Beachy’s first book, The Soul of Commerce: Credit, Property, and Politics in Leipzig, 1750- 1840 (Brill, 2005) examined the role of early modern social ties and commercial culture in shaping political reform in Germany. Most recently, he published Gay Berlin: Birthplace of a Modern Identity (Knopf, 2014; Vintage PB, 2015), which won the Randy Shilts Award and has since appeared in German and Italian translations. He is now working on a monograph about the Nazi persecution of homosexuals.

Minority German Literature, Black Internationalism, and Futurity

Moderator: Dr. Daniel Vukovich, Associate Professor, Department of Comparative Literature, HKU

Once celebrated by the award of a literary prize dedicated to “migrant authors,” minority German literature has become a staple of contemporary world literature. This talk analyzes the rise of the Afro-German literary movement, its concerns with social justice, race, gender, and poetics, and the commonalities it shares with German Turkish literature and performance through tropes of blackness. Second, the presentation poses questions about the relations between minority German literature and black internationalism as an early form of exchange and activism that contributes to world literature in Western and non-Western contexts. The talk concludes by considering the function of futurity in minority literatures.

Speaker bio:

Arina Rotaru is a Lecturer at NYU Shanghai and a visitor at the Center for the Study of Cultures and Globalization at the University of Hong Kong. She holds a PhD in German Studies and Comparative Literature from Cornell University and her research covers avant-garde literature and film, postcolonial studies, world literature. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in the Journal of World Literature, Germanic Review, Forum for Modern Language Studies and edited collections on Worlding Asia, Totalitarian Arts, and Aesthetics and Politics. She is currently working on two book projects on contemporary avant-garde literature in twenty-first German-speaking literature and on diasporic poetics.

Date: 10 April 2019
Time: 2-3:30pm
Venue: 4.36, 4/F, Run Run Shaw Tower, Centennial Campus, HKU

All are welcome.

For general enquiries, please contact Christine Vicera at viceracn@hku.hk

Melon Conference @ HKU: Women in Science Fiction

Speakers: Jo Walton, Aliette de Bodard, Regina Kanyu Wang, Rebecca F. Kuang

Speakers’ bio:
Jo Walton
Jo Walton is author of 13 Sci-Fi and fantasy novels, with her latest, Lent, due out in May. She has won many awards including Hugo and Nebula awards for Among Others, and the Tiptree Award for My Real Children in 2015. Jo is from Wales, but emigrated to Montreal in Canada in 2002. She plans to live to be 99 and write a book every year.

Aliette de Bodard
Aliette de Bodard lives and works in Paris. She is the author of the critically acclaimed Obsidian and Blood trilogy of Aztec noir fantasies, as well as numerous short stories that have garnered her two Nebula Awards, a Locus Award and two British Science Fiction Association Awards

Regina Kanyu Wang
Regina Kanyu Want is a bilingual writer from Shanghai, and graduate of Fudan University. She is a member of Shanghai Writer’s Association and the World Chinese Sci-Fi Association, and has been invited as a guest of Shanghai-Taipei Literary camp, the Euro-Asia Economic Forum and Sun Yat-Sen University Writing Residency.

Rebecca F. Kuang
Rebecca F. Kuang was born in Guangzhou, emigrated to the US in 2000, and has a BA from Georgetown University. Her debut novel The Poppy War was published by Harper Voyager in 2018 and was a Goodreads Choice Awards Finalist and one of Time’s Best Books of 2018. The sequel The Dragon Republic comes out in August

Moderators:
Dr. Alvin Wong, Department of Comparative Literature, HKU
Mr. William Lau, English Language Centre, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Date: Friday 22 March 2019
Time: 4-6 PM
Venue: 4.36, 4/F, Sir Run Run Shaw Tower, Centennial Campus, HKU
 
Register at goo.gl/WPVK1x for a chance to win free tickets to Melon 2019: Aliens on the Galactic Silk Road!

For more information on Melon, please visit http://www.melon-x.com/

Dialogue with Filmmakers 2019

This year’s programme features in-depth dialogues with eight renowned documentary filmmakers and artists: Tsai Ming Liang, Jewel Maranan, Bettina Perut, Iván Osnovikoff, Ljubomir Stefanov, Tamara Kotevska, Philippe Bellaiche and Luke Lorentzen.

Date: 21 – 28 . 03 . 2019  |  7:30pm

Location: Studio Room 303, Chong Yuet Ming Cultural Centre, HKU

Events

21 . 3 . 2019 (Thu): Dialogue with Jewel Maranan

Jewel Maranan is an independent documentary filmmaker and producer from the Philippines. She started working for independent documentaries in 2008, tackling conflict situations in Manila. Throughout the years, she has developed a deep interest in the ways by which history inches through ordinary life. She fixed her critical eye on the lives in the shadow of Tondo’s ever-engulfing port and finished her latest work IN THE CLAWS OF A CENTURY WANTING (2017), speaking for the silent from a small town near Manila. Jewel is an active participant in efforts to help develop Southeast Asian documentary through the SEA DocNet, a network of documentary professionals in Southeast Asia.

22 . 3 . 2019 (Fri): Dialogue with Tsai Ming-Liang

Born in Malaysia in 1957, Tsai Ming-Liang is one of the most prominent film directors of the new cinema movement in Taiwan. In 1994, his film VIVE L’AMOUR won the Golden Lion Award at the Venice Film Festival, establishing his status in international cinema. In 2009, FACE became the first film to be included in the collection of the Louvre Museum’s “Le Louvre s’offre aux cineastes.” It has since become the benchmark for films venturing into the world of art galleries. His STRAY DOGS (2013) was awarded the Grand Jury Prize at the 70th Venice Film Festival. In recent years, Tsai Ming-Liang has also moved on to installation art, showcased in exhibitions held in various cities including Taipei, Venice, Shanghai and Nagoya.

26 . 3 . 2019 (Tue): Dialogue with Bettina Perut & Iván Osnovikoff (Screening +Q&A)

Bettina Perut and Iván Osnovikoff have worked together since 1997 directing and producing documentaries. With seven feature films to their credit, their poetic journey is full of turning points and mutations that have accompanied the technological and cultural transformations of their time, challenging the most stable and conservative premises of what is meant by documentary filmmaking. Their work SURIRE (2015) is about the Surire salt flat located in the Chilean high plateau. As observation in visual language, it is a film that portrays this unique space in which natural beauty, human absurdity and cultural decline coexist.

27 . 3 . 2019 (Wed): Dialogue with Ljubomir Stefanov & Tamara Kotevska

Ljubomir Stefanov & Tamara Kotevska co-directed the documentary film HONEYLANDwhich won three awards at Sundance 2019 including World Cinema Grand Jury Prize: Documentary. Ljubomir Stefanov has over 20 years of experience in development and production of communication concepts and documentaries related to environmental issues and human development. He worked for clients such as UN agencies, EuroNatur and Swisscontact. Tamara Kotevska graduated in film directing from the Faculty of Dramatic Arts Skopje. She has 5-year experience in documentary and fiction film making as a freelance film director.

28 . 3 . 2019 (Thu): Dialogue with Philippe Bellaiche & Luke Lorentzen

Born in Paris, Philippe Bellaiche is an award-winning cinematographer. His latest production , which he also produced and co-directed, ADVOCATE features Lea Tsemel, a Jewish-Israeli lawyer who has represented political prisoners for five decades. Luke Lorentzen graduated from Stanford University in art history and film studies.​ He directed MIDNIGHT FAMILY which won U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Cinematography at Sundance 2019. The documentary tells the story of the Ochoa family which runs a private ambulance in Mexico City, competing with other for-profit EMTs for patients in need of urgent help.

Register now at http://www.hkdocumentary.com/dialogue-with-filmmakers-2019/




The Art of Film Festival Programming

How do films circulate internationally and what role do film markets, film festivals, and film venues play in this
phenomenon?

Three programmers who specialise in Asian cinema will discuss these
matters along with their individual strategies, training, and success
stories during this special panel. All three panelists are in Hong Kong for Filmart and the Hong Kong International Film Festival so particular attention will be given as to how these two events empower them to do what they do more effectively.

Speakers:
Dr Elena Pollacchi
Elena Pollacchi is Lecturer in Chinese Studies. She has taught courses on Chinese cinema and culture at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice (Italy) and at Gothenburg University (Sweden). She is also programmer for Chinese and South Korean film at the Venice International Film Festival. Her research encompasses the Chinese film market in its transnational connections, Chinese documentary film, and film festivals. Her recent publications include chapters in Chinese Film Festivals: Sites of Translation (eds. C. Berry, L. Robinson, Palgrave Macmillan 2017), Taiwan Cinema: International Reception and Social Change (eds. K. Chiu, M. Rawnsley, G. Rawnsley, Routledge, 2017) and Screening China’s Soft Power (P. Voci, L.Hui; Routledge, 2018), and the article “Extracting narratives from reality: Wang Bing’s counter-narrative of the China Dream” for the Journal of Documentary Studies (Special Issue: Engagement, Witnessing and Activism: Independent Chinese Documentary Filmmakers Different Positions, Approaches and Aesthetics), 11:3 (2017).

Prof Andrew Willis
Andy Willis is Professor of Film Studies at the University of Salford, Senior Visiting Curator: Film at HOME in Manchester, and a founder member of The Chinese Film Forum UK. He has written widely on film related topics with a special interest in popular cinemas and UK distribution and exhibition trends. He has curated numerous film seasons including Visible Secrets: Hong Kong’s Women Filmmakers (2009) and CRIME: Hong Kong Style (2016).

Mr Samuel Jamier
Samuel Jamier is the Executive Director of the critically-acclaimed New York Asian Film Festival, which is known for its outstanding selection of entertainment and arthouse films. He was previously the chief programmer for the Japan Society and was in charge of the Japan Cuts Film Festival. Highly knowledgeable and familiar with Asian films and regional industries, Jamier was in Singapore as part of the recently concluded SGIFF 2018, where he served as an International Advisor on the Silver Screen Awards Panel.

Moderator: Dr Aaron Han Joon Magnan-Park, Department of Comparative Literature, HKU

Date: Wednesday 20 March 2019
Time: 2:30-4:30pm
Venue: CPD LG.08, Centennial Campus, HKU
 
All are welcome.

Contemporary Chinese Documentary Series: Meet the Director

《村小的孩子》蔣能杰作品(普通話及方言對白,中、英文字幕)

2009年首次走進村小,鏡頭記錄臨時學校的22個學生(其中17個為留守兒童),同時關注村小申請重建艱難
2010年重建後的村小調來張老師教兩個班,代課十幾年的張老師老為轉正問題煩心和奔波,跟拍的留守兒童的學習、心理、生活也面臨着種種問題 
2011年代課的張老師因種種不滿,已離開村小,跟拍的孩子們面臨的問題愈加嚴重
2012年由於媒體的力量,村小的物質條件有所改變,但好像無力改善更多
2013年留守兒童生活看是沒什麼變化,其實在悄悄變化着
2014年又是一年春節,而跟拍的留守兒童家庭……

日期:2019年3月19日 (星期二)
時間:下午4:00時 (3時30分茶敘;4時電影播放;5時35分電影議評)
地點:香港大學梅堂地下演講廳
議論:蔣能杰導演、王丹博士 (普通話及英語)
無需報名,座位有限,先到先得!
海報︰www.hkihss.hku.hk/events/film21
查詢電話︰3917 5772 | ihss@hku.hk

Children at a Village School a Jiang Nengjie’s film (Putonghua & Dialect dialogue, Chinese & English subtitles)
2009: First glance at the village school, in which the lives of 22 students including 17 left-behind children, together with the unsmooth application of the school’s reconstruction, were focused on. 
2010: Teacher Zhang, a supply teacher with more than 10 years teaching experience, was assigned to the reconstructed school. While in charge of two classes, he was concerned about, and striving for the obtainment of permanent teaching status. Meanwhile, folks began to doubt on the quality of the school buildings, as the left-behind children were facing numerous problems in life, study and emotion. 
2011: Mr. Zhang left the school out of dissatisfaction. After he left, the problems those left-behind children were confronting with became more serious.
2012: Thanks to the media, the material condition of the village school began to turn around. However, it still had a long way to go. 
2013: The situation of those left-behind children seems unchanged, but it turned out to get changed day by day.
2014: As another Spring Festival comes, what is going on in those left-behind families?

Date: 19 March 2019 (Tuesday)
Time: 16:00 (15:30 – Reception; 16:00 – Film Screening; 17:35 – Discussion)
Venue: Lecture Hall, G/F, May Hall, HKU
Discussion with Director Jiang Nengjie, and Dr. Wang Dan (in Putonghua & English)
Free admission; first come, first served.
Poster: www.hkihss.hku.hk/events/film21
Enquiries: 3917 5772 | ihss@hku.hk

(This is an event jointly organized by The Hong Kong Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences and Wah Ching Centre of Research on Education in China, The University of Hong Kong.)