All of us Chinese cannot wait any longer. Every day of delay will bring great suffering, disaster, revenge, social suici···
On June 12, 2024, the 107th Kuige Lecture will be held at the Donglu Campus of Yunnan University. The activities are rich in content, including documentary broadcasts and in-depth exchanges with experts.
From the perspectives of tourism and anthropology, this lecture has unique perspectives and value.
Yunnan University Donglu Campus is the venue for this event.
On Wednesday, June 12, 2024, at 2:30 pm, some activities will be held in the Film and Television Anthropology Laboratory (No. 304) on the third floor of the Museum of Anthropology.
At 7:00 p.m., the documentary will be screened in the lecture hall on the second floor.
This arrangement allows teachers and students of Yunnan University and everyone interested in this field to participate in the event conveniently.
Each link of the lecture is assigned to different locations, which reflects the organizer's careful classification and layout of the lecture content.
Kuige lectures up to Lecture 107 must have a profound accumulation and a loyal audience.
The continuous holding of such lectures has played a role in promoting academic inheritance and exchanges that cannot be ignored.
Zhang Hai is the director of the Film and Television Anthropology Laboratory of the School of Ethnology and Sociology of Yunnan University. He was influential both in academic circles and in organizational work.
The specially invited Dr.Tami has a rich resume.
She serves as an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of New Mexico. At the same time, she is known as a "Quige Scholar" at the School of Ethnology and Sociology at Yunnan University.
She has conducted in-depth research in multiple academic branches, including tourism, cultural anthropology, and intangible cultural heritage.
I spent 20 years conducting field research in the Mosuo area beside Lugu Lake in Ninglang, Lijiang. After a long period of careful observation, I obtained a lot of original observation data.
She has extensive experience documenting and conducting interviews from multiple perspectives, including in-depth exploration of the cultural transformations that the Mosuo have experienced while living in the city.
He has made great achievements, edited many works, published various types of papers, led several scientific research projects, and received funding such as Fulbright Scholarship.
Dr.Tami’s main research directions are tourism and cultural anthropology.
This is closely related to the Lugu Lake tourism theme of the lecture.
The tourism development of Lugu Lake in the past 20 years has its own unique phenomenon and logic behind it.
With the rapid development of tourism, changes in local culture and society are worth exploring.
Anthropologists usually accumulate travel experiences through field notes and observations, while film and television anthropologists construct stories by making films and collecting footage.
This difference highlights the unique way this lecture uses images to display the tourism characteristics of Lugu Lake.
The process of transforming fieldwork findings into ethnographic films is complex and full of fun, and is closely connected with Dr. Tami’s in-depth research on Lugu Lake.
The two documentaries screened this evening are both created around the theme of Lugu Lake tourism.
The work "Some Na (Certain "Inclusion" Ceremony)" was co-created by Onci, Duoji and Tami.
It can present the "Nacer" life around Lugu Lake from a specific perspective. Although the video is only 31 minutes long, the content is very concise.
Another film, "Zhuan:,," focuses on the life of the Mosuo people in Yongning.
It is divided into five parts to show the changes and changes in life in a unique form.
Shown in the form of a documentary, the life of three families and three villages allows the audience to understand the daily life of the Mosuo people in detail through five key perspectives. This kind of movie is an in-depth cultural anthropological study of the living conditions in the Lugu Lake area.
For Yunnan University, this lecture enriched the academic activities of the university.
It also allows students in related majors to be exposed to cutting-edge academic perspectives.
Students majoring in ethnology and sociology can acquire a wealth of field investigation skills and ways to transform results through the Lugu Lake case.
From the perspective of cultural communication, Lugu Lake itself has a unique national culture.
Lectures and documentaries allowed people to understand the beauty of Lugu Lake and also revealed its profound cultural heritage.
This is conducive to the external dissemination of Lugu Lake culture. It is not only beneficial to the inheritance and progress of local culture, but also has a positive effect on tourists' in-depth understanding of local culture.
The lecture has attracted the attention of many people before it even started.
Everyone is eager to witness the beautiful scenery of Lugu Lake in the film, and at the same time, through Dr. Tami's narration, have a deeper understanding of the deeper meaning of tourism anthropology.
It is hoped that during the lecture, participants and the speaker can have a good interaction.
One is to answer questions, and the other is to generate new sparks of thinking.
This even provides some ideas and guidance for future Lugu Lake tourism research and the application of film and television anthropology in other tourist destinations.
Are you also interested in such lectures that are interdisciplinary and full of regional cultural characteristics?
Do you also want to absorb useful knowledge from this lecture?