Event


Killing Communists: Literature, Film and the Making of the Post-Cold War in conversation with Jini Kim Watson

Sep 22, 2021 at

Fisher-Bennett Hall Faculty Lounge (Room 135)

Cold War

 

Meet in person with Jini Kim Watson (NYU)


The event will take place from 4:30-6pm in Fisher-Bennett Hall Faculty Lounge (Room 135).

Dr. Watson will be giving a talk titled Killing Communists: Literature, Film and the Making of the Post-Cold War drawn from her new book, Cold War Reckonings: Authoritarianism and the Genres of Decolonization (Fordham UP 2021).

Event co-sponsored by Penn's Asian American Studies Program and the Center for East Asian Studies.

Killing Communists: Literature, Film, and the Making of the Post-Cold War

How did the Cold War shape political modernity in the Third World, and what do literature and film reveal about such political contestations and their afterlives? This talk examines Joshua Oppenheimer’s controversial documentary The Act of Killing (2012) and Han Kang’s Human Acts([Sonyŏni Onda] (2014) for their intimate reckoning with the past violence of Cold War authoritarian regimes. Framing my analysis in terms of the temporal logic of transitional justice, I consider Oppenheimer’s striking aestheticization of killing and Hans’ exquisite portrayal of pain to ask whether the genres of truth commissions—individual truth-telling, commemoration, reconciliation, and official mourning—can proffer notions of ethical reckoning beyond today’s authoritative temporality of “post-Cold War.” The talk is drawn from my new book, Cold War Reckonings: Authoritarianism and the Genres of Decolonization (Fordham UP, 2021), which examines cultural production that emerges from, and reflects upon, the entanglement of the Cold War and decolonization in East and Southeast Asia.

Jini Kim Watson is an Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at New York University. Her research and teaching focus on Asia Pacific literature, film, and cultural studies; decolonization and the global Cold War; spatial and urban theory; questions of sovereignty and political modernity; Marxism and critical theory. In addition to Cold War Reckonings (Fordham UP, 2021), she is the author of The New Asian City: Three-dimensional Fictions of Space and Urban Form (Minnesota UP, 2011), and has also co-edited, with Gary Wilder, the collected volume, The Postcolonial Contemporary: Political Imaginaries for the Global Present (Fordham UP, 2018). Watson received her Ph.D. from Duke University's Literature Program and undergraduate degrees in architecture and liberal arts from the University of Melbourne and University of Queensland, Australia.