|
|
Desiring the City: Cinema and Ideology in Socialist Mongolia
|
|
|
When: Wednesday, March 6, 2019, 5:30-7:00 p.m. Presenters: Christian Sorace |
|
|
In a letter to Lunacharsky dated February 1922, Lenin wrote: “You must always remember that of all of the arts the most important for us is cinema.” During the 1960s in the Mongolian People’s Republic, cinema was used as a mode of enchantment and ideological argument for urbanization in a traditionally nomadic culture. During that period, however, Mongolia not only suffered from construction labor and material shortages but also uncertain and wavering desire for the promised modernity of urban life. Popular movies from that time, such as Harmonica and I Wish I Had a Horse, artfully staged the relationship between modernity and tradition, urbanization and pastoralism, imagination and material reality.
In this talk, He will discuss how Ulaanbaatar, the capital city of Mongolia was constructed as much in film and in the imagination, as it was in material reality.
|
|
|
About the presenter: Christian Sorace |
|
|
He is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Colorado College. He is the author of Shaken Authority: China’s Communist Party and the 2008 Sichuan Earthquake (Cornell University Press, 2017) and co-editor of Afterlives of Chinese Communism: Political Concepts from Mao to Xi (Verso/ANU Press, 2019).
His articles have appeared in Public Culture, Critical Inquiry, Comparative Politics, The China Journal, and The China Quarterly among other journals. His current research focuses on urbanization within the Mongolian steppe. He is a recent member of ACMS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The American Center for Mongolian Studies (ACMS) is a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting scholarship in Mongolian Studies. The ACMS Speaker Series are organized in partnership with the U.S. Embassy and the Natsagdorj Library and provides an important platform for researchers engaged in Mongolia to share their experiences and findings with the public. The event promotes information exchange on a variety of subjects related to Mongolia and is free and open to the public. |
|
|
Thank you to the American Corner and the Natsagdorj Library for sponsoring this event!
|
|
|
For more information visit the ACMS website |
|
|