• 제목/요약/키워드: 성노

검색결과 2건 처리시간 0.018초

VR 영화의 시점과 프레임-VR단편영화<동두천>을 중심으로 (The Point of View and Frame in The VR Movie-Focusing on )

  • 김선아
    • 한국콘텐츠학회논문지
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    • 제20권4호
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    • pp.518-529
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    • 2020
  • <동두천>(Bloodless, 2017)은 1992년 미군에 의해 살해당한 한국 여성 성노동자 윤금이씨에 관한 실제 사건을 바탕으로 만든 VR단편다큐멘터리 영화이다. 본 연구는 <동두천>에서 나타난 1인칭 시점의 혼용과 암묵적 프레임 안에 덧붙여진 이차 프레임의 활용을 구체적으로 살펴본다. VR 기술의 발달과 더불어 VR 영상문법에 관한 이해가 깊어질 때 VR영화의 스토리텔링 역시 다양하고 흥미로워질 수 있을 것이다.

횡단의 연극, 공연의 정치학: 한국계 미국드라마의 디아스포라적 상상력 ((Per)Forming at the Threshold: Diasporic Imagination in Korean American Drama)

  • 최성희
    • 비교문화연구
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    • 제26권
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    • pp.249-272
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    • 2012
  • Diaspora studies has become one of the fastest growing field in the humanities over the past several decades, and the use of term diaspora has been widening to include almost any population on the move. Diaspora literature not only mirrors but actively incorporates this new notion of diaspora with characters "at the threshold" navigating new territories and identities. Querying how diaspora studies intersects with theatre and performance, this paper attempts to probe how recent Korean American drama parallels and promotes diaspora studies' radical departure from traditional notions of identities and territories. For this purpose, this essay 1) examines theoretical affinities between diaspora studies and performance studies 2) investigates how Sung Rno's plays, Cleveland Raining and wAve, explore and embody multiple and evolving meanings of Korean diaspora on the stage 3) examines how theatre can create the third space that transcends both Korean and American nationalism and 4) speculates possibilities of reframing Asian American Studies as Asian diaspora studies. Korean American characters in Rno's play redirect diasporic identities, as their concern gradually moves from "where I come from" to "where I go to." Instead of remaining in the dark as a mere spectator, both Rno and his characters choose to be 'on' the stage where they can imagine, perform, and realize (however temporarily) "unimaginable community" by confronting their own social, political, and cultural ambivalence. Stage, the threshold between reality and fiction, Korea and America, and past and future, becomes their true 'home' where they incubate and precipitate "nation in transformation" that Yan Haiping argues for as "another transnational."