
Asian Visual Cultures
This series focuses on visual cultures that are produced, distributed and consumed in Asia and by Asian communities worldwide. Visual cultures have been implicated in creative policies of the state and in global cultural networks (such as the art world, film festivals and the Internet), particularly since the emergence of digital technologies. Asia is home to some of the major film, television and video industries in the world, while Asian contemporary artists are selling their works for record prices at the international art markets. Visual communication and innovation is also thriving in transnational networks and communities at the grass-roots level. This series seeks to explore how the texts and contexts of Asian visual cultures shape, express and negotiate new forms of creativity, subjectivity and cultural politics. It specifically aims to probe into the political, commercial and digital contexts in which visual cultures emerge and circulate, and to trace the potential of these cultures for political or social critique.


Exhibiting Chinese Art in Asia

Celebrity Activism and Philanthropy in Asia

Hong Kong Pop Culture in the 1980s

Women Filmmakers in Sinophone World Cinema

Philippine Digital Cultures

Performing Fear in Television Production

Erotic Comics in Japan

Asian Self-Representation at World's Fairs

Queer Representations in Chinese-language Film and the Cultural Landscape

Southeast Asia on Screen

Museum Processes in China

Independent Filmmaking across Borders in Contemporary Asia

Intimate Visualities and the Politics of Fandom in India

Boredom, Shanzhai, and Digitisation in the Time of Creative China

Globalization and Modernity in Asia

Feminisms and Contemporary Art in Indonesia
