Current NYU Shanghai Global Research Initiatives Fellows

Chen-Chieh Hsu
M.F.A. Candidate, Department of Film, Tisch

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (September 16 - December 16): 

Hsu’s project seeks to finalize post-production work of his thesis film and will continue to shoot his long term documentary project about the historical path of Taiwanese people working in China. Taiwanese people were allowed to work in China in the early 90's and it has drastically changed Taiwanese and Chinese relationship in many aspects. Hsu plans to examine the “filmmakers' life,” how Taiwanese filmmaker immigrants have found their way settling down in China, and their thoughts on the future of Taiwanese cinema.

Ting-Wu Cho
PhD Candidate, Department of Cinema Studies, Tisch

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (January 7 - February 9):

Cho’s dissertation examines Taiwan Pulp, a boom of exploitation film culture in Taiwan and other Southeast Asian regions from the 1970s to 1980s. With an integrative approach, the research seeks to construct a historiography of the production and consumption of desires which mediated the political, social, and economic transitions in East Asia as a consequence of the geopolitics shaped by the Cold War. In order to conduct thorough fieldwork about the underground film collection/circulation history in China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, Cho has mapped out film archives and old theaters as well as established contact with scholars, filmmakers, and film collectors in cities such as Taipei, Hong Kong, and Shanghai.

Professor Angela Zito
Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, FAS

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (September 7 - November 15):

Linked to Confucianism in the revolutionary upheavals of the first half of the 20th century and abandoned, roundly critiqued and further disestablished during the socialist period, filiality or xiaoxun, is now suffering a revival at the government’s initiative that is precarious and not uncontested. Professor Zito is collecting and analyzing various material cultural expressions of this revival, including images, texts, TV watching, and film. They represent the current aspects of a book project that will combine essays on filiality in the 18th century and these present-day revivals. Professor Zito will be collecting further instances of the popular propaganda (and discussions) on family values and filiality. She will also participate in the MODO Workshop at the Institute for Anthropology at ECNU, headed by Professor Huang Jianbo. 

 

 

 

Li Chen
M.B.A. Candidate, Department of Management and Organizations, Stern

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (Sept 3 - Nov 30):

As the business world grows smaller, cross-culture collaborations and negotiations have become a common topic over the years. Yet the area remains an under researched practice area. Chen’s research is an overview of the similarities and differences between American and Chinese collaboration strategies. Through last years GRI project, Chen realized the importance of effective communication in Chinese business world, especially for working professionals with limited Chinese work experience. Based on current literature and class materials, Chen would like to conduct empirical research in Shanghai to better identify the Chinese collaboration and negotiation practices. Due to the increasing amount of foreign influence, Chen would like to explore whether the tone, gestures, signals, and underlying assumptions about Chinese business interactions have become similar to the American norms and what differences persist that participants should remain respectful of.

 

William Hudelson
PhD Candidate, Department of Music, GSAS

Synopsis of Research in Shanghai (January 11 - February 5):

Hudelson’s research examines four technologically-mediated sonic phenomena and their associated cultural milieux to show how each produces a unique conception of the body. Through these four case studies, he argues that sound and sound technology are co-constitutive: sound technology makes sound accessible and manipulable, but it also exerts an epistemological back-pressure on the listener. Hudelson plans to consult with two faculty members of the field at NYU Shanghai. Professor Anna Greenspan’s global perspective on cyberculture will be particularly informative for Hudelson’s chapter on ASMR. Professor Marianne Petit’s artistic practice may offer alternative ways of conceiving of the various forms of “amateur science” that Hudelson’s dissertation explores. He also plans to research similar techno-cultural phenomena taking place amid the rapid modernization underway in present-day China.