The students in Sue Fernsebner‘s Chinese History through Film course have been hard at work creating GIFs as part of their film analyses. There are a bunch of excellent GIFs that try and capture a particularly significant moment within the film they’re analyzing. For example, the GIF analysis for the film Not One Less (1999) effectively focuses on the film’s recurring use of chalk to frame the underfunding of rural elementary schools in China. I really love how the student uses the GIFs to capture the chalk moments, the only thing is they are far too big and need to be optimized so they’ll load in the browser.
Another analysis I really loved is a sequence taken from the 1994 film Ermo. This film follows one woman’s obsession with purchasing a television, and the following multi-shot GIF sequence, alongside the student’s analysis, really captures the emergence of consumerism and the rols of capitalism in 1990s China—somethign we’ve witnessed the apotheosis of in the 21st century.



Finally, another GIF I really enjoyed but is too heavy to link to in this post is this sweeping shot from the 1950s propanganda film The Red Detachment of Women. I love how the GIF captures the way in which masculine and feminine roles in the revolution are framed, as well as the sexual innuendo of the scene.
And that’s just a few of the nineteen examples of students playing with GIFs to analyze Chinese history through films. Now that’s EDUCATIONAL!
OK, so I see how this goes:
1. Kennedy Assassination
2. Chinese Film GIFs
….
167. Ferbie-mania in late 2oth century cinema
168. Five surprising things I found in my sock drawer
169. Responding to Mike Caulfield’s blog
Just kidding obviously, good to have you back at the blog…
Mfike,
I you saw my list of posts I think you would realize that you are actually pretty close, but no cigar. Responding to Mike Caulfield is number 172 on my list 🙂 I suck, I am working on it, if you weren’t so damn prolific this would have been a lot easier.