Screening And A Conversation
With Filmmaker Y. David Chung And Prof. John Kuo Wei Tchen
"Koryo Saram" (the Soviet Korean phrase for Korean person) tells the harrowing saga of survival in the open steppe country and the sweep of Soviet history through the eyes of these deported Koreans, who were designated by Stalin as an "unreliable people" and enemies of the state. Through recently uncovered archival footage and new interviews, the film follows the deportees’ history of integrating into the Soviet system while working under punishing conditions in Kazakhstan, a country which became a concentration camp of exiled people from throughout the Soviet Union.
Today, in the context of Kazakhstan's recent emergence as a rapidly modernizing, independent state, the story of the Kazakhstani-Koreans situated within this ethnically diverse country has resonance with the experience of many Americans and how they have assimilated to form new cultures in our world of increasingly displaced people.
The screening will be followed by a conversation between filmmaker Y. David Chung and Prof. John Kuo Wei Tchen, Founding Director of A/P/A Institute at NYU.Visit www.apa.nyu.edu
Thursday, September 25, 2008 | 6:30 PM
Cantor Film Center
36 East 8th Street
Theater 102
New York, NY 10003
(212) 998-4100
Free and open to the public
Please RSVP by Tuesday, September 23 to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or call 212-992-8653
Co-sponsored by:
The Korea Society & the NYU Center for Media, Culture, and History/Center for Media and Religion
With support by Asia Society