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9 - Viral Visions: The Pandemic Archive in Miasma, Plants, Export Paintings (2017) and Many Undulating Things (2019)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 February 2024

Gina Marchetti
Affiliation:
Pratt Institute, New York
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Summary

Abstract: Cinematic Orientalism overlaps with the archival history of ornamental export goods, medicinal plants, and racially inflected theories of disease in Bo Wang and Pan Lu’s video installation Miasma, Plants, Export Paintings (2017) and a section of the essay film Many Undulating Things (2019). The installation video and the film use documents such as drawings, photographs, and film clips of China and the Chinese to plumb the depths of the persistence of racism and sexism in global visual culture. The COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent upsurge in anti-Chinese violence places the themes treated in these motion pictures into an ongoing conversation about racism and sexism in the wake of imperial expansion and colonialism in Asia.

Keywords: Orientalism; ornamentalism; treaty port; outbreak narrative; normalizing gaze; third eye

The imperial archive of images of Chinese women’s bodies in export paintings, ceramic figurines, decorative fabrics, scientific illustrations, souvenirs for tourists, and photographs of various sorts predates the advent of the motion picture. For those marginalized because of their race, class, ethnicity, or gender, the feverish archival desire described by Derrida (1996 [1995]) may take shape less as a nostalgic return and more as a drive to set the record straight by reframing images that served Orientalist configurations of power. Cinematic Orientalism overlaps with the archival history of ornamental export goods, medicinal plants, and racially inflected theories of disease in Bo Wang and Pan Lu’s video installation Miasma, Plants, Export Paintings (2017) and a section of the essay film Many Undulating Things (2019).

This chapter explores how the installation video and the film use documents such as drawings, photographs, and film clips of China and the Chinese to plumb the depths of the persistence of racism and sexism in visual culture. Bo Wang and Pan Lu draw on Hollywood classics, including D.W. Griffith’s Broken Blossoms (1919) and Henry King’s Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955), in order to connect the visual archives of imperial science, commerce, medicine, religion, colonial government and policing with the popular imagination through the cinema.

The View from the Archive

The film archive contains considerable evidence of the intersection of race and gender as a legacy of colonialism and imperial conquest. Even the periphery of the film strip holds evidence of bias.

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Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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