Finding Kukan: A Film Screening, Commentary and Audience Q&A with Dir. Robin Lung

In the award-winning documentary Finding KUKAN, director Robin Lung investigates the compelling story of Hawaiʻi born Li Ling-Ai, the uncredited producer of KUKANKUKAN is a landmark color documentary about World War II China that received an Academy Award in 1942 before becoming “lost” for decades. In Finding KUKAN, Lung discovers a badly damaged print of KUKAN and pieces together the inspirational tale behind Li and her cameraman Rey Scott. Robin Lung will present the full 75-minute documentary Finding KUKAN (in English with Chinese subtitles)speak about her 8-year-long filmmaking journey, and answer questions from the audience.

About Robin Lung:

Robin Lung is a 4th generation Chinese American from Hawaiʻi with an 18-year history of bringing untold minority and womenʻs stories to film. A Stanford University and Hunter College graduate, she became a filmmaker after successful careers in book publishing and higher education. Lung made her directorial debut with Washington Place: Hawai‘i’s First Home, a 30-minute documentary for PBS Hawai‘i about the legacy of Hawaiʻi’s Queen Lili‘uokalani and her personal home. She was the associate producer for the national PBS documentary Patsy Mink: Ahead of the Majority, and producer/director of the feature documentary FindingKUKAN, which was selected to be broadcasted nationally on PBS World’s America ReFramed series and has won multiple awards at film festivals across America.

Date: Monday 20 May 2019

Time: 2:30-4:30pm

Venue: 2.42, 2/F, Sir 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