Asian SF/F (not Japan)
Mon, May. 12th, 2008 12:12 pmHi! I am lazy and depending on the goodwill of the internet to help with research!
So: tell me about Asian SF/F!
It must be:
I have a slightly better sense of SF/F created in Asia and popular in the US, though if you have notes for your specific country, that would also be good! Please note: NOT from Japan.
For self:
rachelmanija's notes on Indian SF/F
ETA:
Korea:
- Pahanjip (Korean folklore + Tang China ghost hunters, manhwa)
- Bride of the Water God (Korean folklore (?) + alternate world + beast bridegroom, manhwa)
China:
- Swordsman II
So: tell me about Asian SF/F!
It must be:
- Created in Asia by Asians
- NOT from Japan
- Any medium
- Bonus points if I can get my hands on it (I am in the US and read/understand Mandarin Chinese)
- Extra bonus points for SF/F from and/or about Southeast Asia or South Asia
I have a slightly better sense of SF/F created in Asia and popular in the US, though if you have notes for your specific country, that would also be good! Please note: NOT from Japan.
For self:
ETA:
Korea:
- Pahanjip (Korean folklore + Tang China ghost hunters, manhwa)
- Bride of the Water God (Korean folklore (?) + alternate world + beast bridegroom, manhwa)
China:
- Swordsman II
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 07:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 07:51 pm (UTC)The paranormal romance Lake House, starring Sandra Bullock/Keanu Reeves, was based on the Korean movie It Mare (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Il_Mare). It might be netflixable, although I fear the movie may be a bit too fluffy for Wiscon.
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 08:02 pm (UTC)I am drawing a blank mostly. 'Return of the Condor Heroes' goes from wuxia to full on fantastic when a giant talking eagle mentors the hero?
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 08:11 pm (UTC)I haven't thought of him for years, but are you familiar with Thai writer Somtow Sucharitkul (a/k/a S. P. Somtow) ? I enjoyed a couple of his things way back when (Light on the Sound comes to mind), although he tends to be a bit too horrific for me.
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 08:27 pm (UTC)He's also the artistic director of the Bangkok Opera and Siam Philharmonic Orchestra (http://www.somtow.com). A multitalented fellow.
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 08:13 pm (UTC)Steven Chow's Chinese Odessey (yes, it's based on the Monkey King, but oh so, loosely, Pandora's box is used to travel through time in this)
A Chinese Tall Tale (has aliens vs. wuxia heroes)
Legend of Zu (wuxia, but fighting formless evil, plus evil fairy!)
Wesley's File ( terrible terrible sci fi w/Shu Qi)
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 09:09 pm (UTC)Full translated title is "The Legend of the First King's Four Gods," usually shortened to "Legend" or "The Four Gods." (Watching it now myself.)
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Posted byHong Kong science fiction movies
Mon, May. 12th, 2008 08:42 pm (UTC)Essential HK movie site: http://www.lovehkfilm.com/
Re: Hong Kong science fiction movies
Mon, May. 12th, 2008 09:14 pm (UTC)More recent, and in more of a Twilight Zone/M. Night Shyamalan sort of horror vein, The Eye (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Eye_(2002_film)); blind Hong Kong violinist gets a cornea transplant, but along with her restored vision she's now seeing ghosts and having premonitions of disasters; the corneas are traced back to a poor village girl in Thailand who'd had the same unwanted talent and was viewed as a witch because of it...
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 09:11 pm (UTC)There are some other assorted Chinese SF things I'll bring, too.
2046 probably counts, too.
By the way, I'm planning on bringing a CD of Taiwanese pop music for you. :)
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Tue, May. 13th, 2008 12:25 am (UTC)Eeeee! Thank you! Also, oooo, I have been trying to Google short SF pieces I can read online. Will email you all links when I have read through to weed stuff out.
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 09:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Mon, May. 12th, 2008 09:28 pm (UTC)This is more along the lines of horror but there is Island, a manhwa by Kyung-Il Yang and In-wan Youn. It has demons, ghosts, exorcists, and an undead serial killer who used to be a Buddhist monk (Esoteric Buddhism, specifically). It also explores the legacy of cultural hatred between Korea and Japan. It used to be licensed by TOKYOPOP but unfortunately, it's since gone out of print.
The creators also have another series called Shin Angyo Onshi which, despite being published in Japan (though I think this is a case of simultaneous publication in Japan & Korea), draws upon all sorts of Korean folklore, myth, legend, and history that I don't even know where to begin.
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 09:30 pm (UTC)Really? That is awesome! Are there links or anything? I have zero idea of the state of SF/F in Asia in general, so people there talking about the genre and how they fit in would be MADE OF WIN!
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 09:33 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Mon, May. 12th, 2008 09:43 pm (UTC)Found it!
This is effing awesome. Read!
EDIT: http://www.lehigh.edu/~amsp/2006/05/where-women-rule-and-mirrors-are.html
This too.
They were in deadbro a looong time back, and yay finding them.
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Mon, May. 12th, 2008 11:14 pm (UTC)Min-Woo Hyung's Priest series. It has a pretty neat art style that is both angular and gorgeous. The protagonist is a priest who made a deal with a devil, as is now undead. The non-linear plotline takes place primarily in the American Wild West, but also in the Crusades and the modern day. The story is very much about redemption and faith, and there are angels as characters. I should note that there's violence, though, if that bothers you.
Kang Won Kim's I.N.V.U. and The Queen's Knight. I.N.V.U. read a lot better when I was in high school, but The Queen's Knight is about a protagonist who is visiting Germany when she falls into a cliff and is transported to another world, where she becomes a queen. I've only made it through four volumes so far, but it seems like it has the potential to be a fun romance.
Also....I will be naughty and slip in a recommendation for CLAMP's 1-volume Legend of Chun Hyang, which is based on a historical Korean figure. But, alas, it is from Japan, so I won't go into detail.
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Tue, May. 13th, 2008 01:26 am (UTC)The Ramayana and Mahabharata are NOT fantasy in my opinion, nonetheless, given how predominantly they feature in 'mythical' retellings, it seems worthwhile to have read them. My personal reccomendation is slogging through translations from the critical Sanskrit unabridged versions--the character development in the Mahabharata is stunning, and the Valmiki Ramayana is far more nuanced and gray-shaded than later, more popular versions like the Tulsi or Kamban Ramayana.
Nala and Damayanti is another great love story with mythic roots (talking messenger swans! Demons disguised as dice!) It would be fun to do a retelling of that someday.
Vikram and Betaal is a long running stories inside stories collection involving a conversation between a King and a Vampire (although personally I see him more as a ghoul than a vampire in the western tradition.)
The Hitopadesh and Panchatantra are two collection of fables that feature talking animals--they are more like Aesop (for which they were the source) than contemporary fantasy, but there is magic in them.
Vikram Seth's 'Beastly Tales from Here and There' is a collection of animal stories in verse that has elements of fantasy in that they have personalities.
Sulman Rushdie's books are considered magic realism; Midnight's Children and The Satanic Verses especially. His YA book 'Haroun and the Sea of Stories' is fantasy (and a great fun read!).
Subhadra Sen Gupta writes historical fiction that skirts on the edge of fantasy (but not really.)
Ruskin Bond has a collection of ghost stories that are not, imho, as good as his more realistic stories, but nonetheless well-written.
R. K. Narayan's 'The English Teacher' could be considered fantasy because i deals with life after death. (Its also a fabulous novel.)
And then there are a bunch of TV shows like Chandrakanta and Captain Vyom that I have repressed because they were so ghastly...
If I remember more stuff, I will let you know.
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Tue, May. 13th, 2008 01:40 am (UTC)Satyajit Ray's film 'Goopi Gain Bagha Bain' was humourous fantasy that I remembered loving when I was a wee one. He also wrote a series of detective novels about a man called Feluda, which, though my memory is misty, seemed to contain some supernatural elements. There are some good English translations of the Feluda novels and short stories IIRC, and he made a film called Shonar Kila based on one of them.
Oh! I remember a TV show way back for teens called 'Indradhanush' that had some sci-fi elements, that I remember enjoying. Perhaps Rachel remembers it?
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Tue, May. 13th, 2008 01:27 am (UTC)(no subject)
Tue, May. 13th, 2008 03:19 am (UTC)SAWNET is a great brief resource, especially for kidlit. The Essential Guide to World Comics is a decent starting point: based merely on what it gets VERY VERY WRONG about manga I would not trust the rest of its factual authority farther than I could fling it, but I plan to get it from the library again because it has lots of names of Thai/Indian/Chinese/Korean series, with scans, to start tracking down elsewhere. (It actually made me tear up at one point; in the brief (ostensibly factual?) section on Cambodian comics, there was a bit about how the section was so brief because the massacres there likely cut back development of homegrown comic artists in comparison to surrounding Asian comic scenes.)
I am totally stalking this post for book-ordering-at-work purposes, FYI. Tiny awesome indie store SFF sections FTW!
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Tue, May. 13th, 2008 07:48 am (UTC)*(playusa.com has region 1 dvds).
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Tue, May. 13th, 2008 09:13 am (UTC)A few films
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