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Chi-Yun Shin

Dr Chi-Yun Shin

Principal Lecturer, Film Studies


Summary

I am a Principal Lecturer in Film Studies and also look after the Marketing and Recruitment activities for Humanities Department. My main research areas are contemporary East Asian cinema (issues around gender, genre, remake and reception) and black British diaspora cinema, and have published articles in a range of journals and edited volumes as well as an encyclopaedia. I co-edited East Asian Film Noir (I.B.Tauris, 2015) and New Korean Cinema (Edinburgh University Press, 2005), and I am on the editorial boards of the Journal of Japanese and Korean Cinema and East Asian Journal of Popular Culture.

About

I am a Principal Lecturer in Film Studies, and recently I took the role of the Marketing and Recruitment Lead for Humanities Department. My research so far is mainly on two areas in the field of Film Studies: contemporary East Asian cinema, particularly of South Korean cinema, and Diaspora cinema of black British (& British Asian) films of the 1980s and 1990s, which was the topic of my PhD thesis (Exeter University). I have widely published on these subjects, exploring a variety of issues regarding film history, gender, genres, particular film directors, reception as well as transnational film remakes. Recent contributions include: Korean Screen Culture, East Asian Film Noir, Korean Horror Cinema, Postcolonial Media Culture in Britain, Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration and Horror to the Extreme: Changing Boundaries in Asian Cinema; as well as journals Transnational Cinemas and Jump Cut. I have also co-edited two volumes: East Asian Film Noir (I.B.Tauris 2015) with Dr Mark Gallagher and New Korean Cinema (Edinburgh University Press, 2005) with Dr Julian Stringer.

I am currently working on several research projects. Firstly, I am developing a monograph proposal that intends to study rooftop space in cinema with a working title Liminal Zones: Rooftops in Cinema. Secondly, I am working on the girlhood and fandom in South Korean TV drama, as part of the Girlhood in East Asian Popular Culture Network. There is also an article that is to be a comparative study of motherhood in relation to two concepts of shame and guilt in two South Korean films, Mother (2009) and Poetry (2010). I am currently on the editorial boards of the Journal of Japanese and Korean Cinema (Routledge) and East Asian Journal of Popular Culture (Intellect).

Rooftop space in cinema, East Asian film genres and gender issues, Diaspora cinema, and transnational cinema

Teaching

Department of Humanities

College of Social Sciences and Arts

Stage and Screen

Film Studies

Contemporary East Asian Cinema, Introduction to Film Analysis, Film Theory, Ïã½¶ÊÓÆµing Cinema

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Monograph project on rooftop space in cinema with a working title, Liminal Zone: Rooftop Space in Cinema.
Girlhood and Fandom in South Korean TV Drama

Publications

Journal articles

Shin, C.-.Y. (2018). In another time and place: The Handmaiden as an adaptation. Journal of Japanese and Korean Cinema.

Shin, C.Y. (2012). . Transnational Cinemas, 3 (1), 67-80.

Shin, C.Y. (2009). East Asian pop culture: Analysing the Korean Wave. Asian Journal of Communication, 19 (3), 356-358.

Shin, C.Y. (2008). . Jump cut: a review of contemporary media, 50, 85-100.

Shin, C.Y. (2003). . Paragraph, 26 (1-2), 201-212.

Conference papers

Shin, C.Y. (2012). . In Korean Film: Years of Radical Change, University of London, School of Oriental and African Studies, 10 May 2012.

Shin, C.Y. (2012). . In Korean Cine-media and the Transnational conference, New York University, Tisch School of the Arts, 11 November 2010 - 14 November 2010.

Shin, C.Y. (2011). . In Sonic Futures: Soundscapes and the Languages of Screen Media. European Network for Cinema and Media Studies (NECS) conference, London (King's College London, Birbeck College, Regent's College), 23 June 2011 - 26 June 2011.

Shin, C.Y. (2008). . In 17th international Screen Studies Conference, Gilmorehill Centre, University of Glasgow, Scotland, 4 July 2008 - 6 July 2008.

Book chapters

Shin, C.-.Y. (2024). Riding the Waves. In The Routledge Companion to Asian Cinemas. (pp. 41-51). Routledge:

Shin, C.-.Y. (2023). The Rise of New Korean Cinema and Hallyu. In Introducing Korean Popular Culture. (pp. 65-73). Routledge:

Shin, C.Y. (2020). In another time and place: Translating gothic romance in The Handmaiden. In Intercultural Screen Adaptation: British and Global Case Studies. (pp. 191-205).

Shin, C.-.Y. (2019). . In Lee, S. (Ed.) Rediscovering Korean Cinema. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press:

Shin, C.Y. (2019). Two of a kind: Gender and friendship in Friend and Take Care of My Cat. In New Korean Cinema. (pp. 117-131).

Shin, C.Y. (2019). Reclaiming the Corporeal: The Black Male Body and the ‘Racial’ Mountain in Looking for Langston. In Men’s Bodies. (pp. 201-212).

Shin, C.Y. (2015). . In Jackson, A.D., & Balmain, C. (Eds.) Korean screen cultures : interrogating cinema, tv, music and online games. (pp. 77-94). Bern: Peter Lang:

Shin, C.-.Y. (2015). . In Shin, C.-.Y., & Gallagher, M. (Eds.) East Asian Film Noir: Transnational Encounters and Intercultural Dialogue. (pp. 215-231). London: I.B.Tauris

Shin, C.Y. (2013). . In Peirse, A., & Martin, D. (Eds.) Korean horror cinema. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press

Shin, C.Y. (2013). . In Ness, I. (Ed.) Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration. Wiley Blackwell:

Shin, C.Y. (2011). Two of a kind: Gender and friendship in friend and take care of my cat. In New Korean Cinema. (pp. 117-131).

Shin, C.Y. (2010). . In Martin, D., & Morris, M. (Eds.) Discovering Korean Cinema. (pp. 26-33). London: The Korean Cultural Centre UK

Shin, C.Y. (2010). . In Brunt, R., & Cere, R. (Eds.) Postcolonial Media Culture in Britain. (pp. 99-114). Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan

Shin, C.Y. (2009). . In Choi, J., & Wada-Marciano, M. (Eds.) Horror to the extreme: changing boundaries in Asian cinema. (pp. 85-100). Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press

Shin, C.Y., & Stringer, J. (2007). . In Gateward, F. (Ed.) Seoul Searching: Culture and Identity in Contemporary Korean Cinema. (pp. 55-72). Albany, NY: State University of New York Press

Books

Shin, C.Y., & Stringer, J. (2019). New Korean cinema.

Shin, C.-.Y., & Gallagher, M. (Eds.). (2015). . London & New York: I.B.Tauris.

Shin, C.-.Y., & Gallagher, M. (Eds.). (2015). . London & New York: I.B.Tauris.

Shin, C.Y., & Stringer, J. (Eds.). (2005). . Edinburgh / New York: Edinburgh University Press / New York University Press.

Shin, C.Y., & Stringer, J. (Eds.). (2005). . Edinburgh / New York: Edinburgh University Press / New York University Press.

Theses / Dissertations

Tomsett, E.L. (2019). . (Doctoral thesis). Supervised by Shin, C.Y.

Presentations

Shin, C.-.Y. (2019). Trajectories of Feminist Film History: Seoul International Women's Film Festival. Presented at: 100 Years of Korean Cinema Symposium, ELTE University, Budapest, Hungary

Shin, C.-.Y. (2018). Spectres of Colonial Love and Postcolonial Exorcise: Strange Tales in Epitaph.

Shin, C.-.Y. (2017). Gothic Heroines in the Films of Park Chan-wook. Presented at: Rethinking Film Genres: East Asian Cinema and Beyond Conference, University of Hull

Shin, C.-.Y. (2016). Girlhood and Mediated Nostalgia in Sunny and Our Times. Presented at: Joint East Asian Studies conference, SOAS, University of London

Shin, C.-.Y. (2015). Pigeons, Rooftops and Heterotopia in On the Waterfront and Ghost Dog: The Way of Samurai. Presented at: Screen Conference, Glasgow University

Shin, C.-.Y. (2013). Between Crime and Punishment: Morals of Motherhood in Mother and Poetry. Presented at: Korean Screen Culture Conference, SOAS University of London

Shin, C.-.Y. (2011). Trajectories of Omnibus: Memories, Journeys and Migration in Tickets. Presented at: NECS (European Network for Cinema and Media Studies) Conference

Other activities

Editorial Board member for two journals:
Journal of Japanese and Korean
Cinema East Asian Journal of Popular Culture

Postgraduate supervision

The Funny Face of Feminism: Women and Comedy in 21st Century Britain
Posting Identity: Creating and Depicting the Twentieth Century ‘Hong Konger’

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