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Vanessa Hope is the director of Invisible Nation, a documentary film that takes a look at the presidency of Tsai Ing-wen, Taiwan's first female president and events that happened during her tenure. We talked about what first brought Vanessa to Taiwan which meant that she was there in 1996 during the inauguration of Lee Teng-hui, Taiwan's first directly elected president. Then in 2016 after Vanessa came to Taiwan with an international delegation to observe Taiwan's presidential elections and witnessed the election of Tsai Ing-wen, she came up with the idea for a film about Tsai Ing-wen's presidency. Related Links: https://talkingtaiwan.com/invisible-nation-director-vanessa-hope-discusses-her-documentary-about-tsai-ing-wens-presidency-ep-284/ Vanessa's first feature length documentary, All Eyes And Ears examined relations between the U.S. and China through the stories of U.S. Ambassador to China Jon Huntsman, his adopted Chinese daughter Gracie Mei, and blind legal advocate Chen Guangcheng. When I asked Vanessa about her experience making a documentary film in China, she recounted a story that explained why she personally related to the backlash and pressure from China that Chou Tzu-yu, a Taiwanese member of a K-pop band has faced. We also talked about the challenges in making Invisible Nation over a seven year period, Vanessa's personal motivations for making the film and where Invisible Nation is going to be screened in the near future. Here's a little preview of what we talked about in this podcast episode: · What brought Vanessa to Taiwan and got her interested in Taiwan · What Vanessa observed when she was in Taiwan for the inauguration of Lee Teng-hui, the first directly elected president of Taiwan · The first time she dabbled in filmmaking · How Vanessa wrote and recorded the podcast, Love Is a Crime, which tells the story of her family's connection to film · The state of the film industry which Vanessa's husband Ted Hope writes about on Substack · How Vanessa came up with the idea for the film, Invisible Nation · Vanessa worked at the Council on Foreign Relations · Vanessa came to Taiwan with an international delegation to observe Taiwan's presidential elections in 2016 and witnessed the election of Tsai Ing-wen · How Vanessa secured a grant focused on women, peace and security · How film producer Sylvia Feng helped Vanessa with submitting a proposal to President Tsai's office regarding her idea for a documentary film · How they filmed an interview with Chen Chu before hearing an answer from President Tsai's office about the documentary film proposal · How Vanessa originally envisioned working a film about Taiwan's first female president · The backlash President Tsai received from China initially · The discrimination that Taiwan faces internationally · How Taiwan has been excluded from international organizations like the WHO, the United Nations, the Olympics and others · How Russia's invasion of Ukraine highlighted concerns about the threat Taiwan faces from China · How Xi Jinping has said that he will not renounce the use of force against Taiwan · Where the name of the film, Invisible Nation came from · The film Vanessa produced, Who We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America, about · If President Tsai had any say in the film Invisible Nation · What personally motivated Vanessa to make the film, Invisible Nation · How the interview and scene with Chen Chu in the film came about · How Chen Chu wrote her will when she was in prison and dedicated her life to the people of Taiwan · What it was like meeting former President Ma Ying-jeou · How Vanessa's mentor at the Council on Foreign Relations, Jerome Cohen had been a professor at Harvard Law School to Ma Ying-jeou and Annette Lu · What Vanessa learned from working at the Council on Foreign Relations · What fascinated Vanessa about how the singer Chou Tzu-yu was forced to apologize for waving a flag that represented Taiwan · Wen Liu's comments about President Tsai that didn't make it into the film Invisible Nation · How it was decided that historical facts to keep in the film or not · How part of the editing process for the film Invisible Nation was to test it on audiences · How Vanessa has had to edit down Invisible Nation from 85 minutes to 55 minutes for television · Who is the target audience of the film, Invisible Nation · Why some of the Taiwanese who worked on Invisible Nation had to use pseudonyms · China's 3 T's that you are not supposed to talk about, Taiwan, Tibet, and Tiananmen · The difference in working on documentary films in China vs. Taiwan · What happened to Vanessa when she was in Tibet and tried to board a train with U.S. Ambassador to China Jon Huntsman, who she was filming for her first documentary film, All Eyes and Ears · Why Vanessa could relate to what happened to the singer Chou Tzu-yu · Scenes that had to be cut from the film, Invisible Nation · The challenge in making Invisible Nation · Feedback that Vanessa has received at screenings of Invisible Nation · What Vanessa hopes that people take away from the film Invisible Nation · If Vanessa has gotten any negative feedback or threats from pro-China media or parties · Where Invisible Nation is going to be screened · Vanessa's future film projects Related Links: https://talkingtaiwan.com/invisible-nation-director-vanessa-hope-discusses-her-documentary-about-tsai-ing-wens-presidency-ep-284/
This episode features a hard-hitting interview with the creator of monster studies, Jeffrey Jerome Cohen! The guys get into the nitty gritty with one of the greatest minds in the field! About this podcast: MONSTERS! They haunt our days and chill our dreaming nights, to paraphrase Emily Dickinson. There's not a population on earth that does not have its own unique monster stories to tell to frighten, but also to instruct on the nature of good and evil, right and wrong. But what happens when monsters get out of control, when the monstrous imagination starts to bleed over into the real world? What are the effects of monsters on real people's real lives? This podcast examines the histories and mysteries of some of our favorite monsters to unlock their secrets and expose their influence on our lives. About the hosts: Michael Chemers (MFA, PhD) is a Professor of Dramatic Literature in the Department of Theater Arts at UC Santa Cruz. His work on monsters includes The Monster in Theatre History: This Thing of Darkness (London, UK: Routledge 2018). Dr. Chemers is the Founding Director of The Center for Monster Studies. Formerly the Founding Director of the Bachelor of Fine Arts in Dramaturgy Program at Carnegie Mellon University, he joined the faculty of UCSC in 2012. He is also the author of Ghost Light: An Introductory Handbook for Dramaturgy (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 2010) and Staging Stigma: A Critical Examination of the American Freak Show (New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2007). Dr. Chemers is also an actor, a juggler, and a writer of drama. Mike Halekakis is an entrepreneur, business owner, internet marketer, software engineer, writer, musician, podcaster, and hardcore situational enthusiast. He is the co-founder of What We Learned, a company that specializes in compassionate training courses on complex adult subjects such as caregiving for people who are sick, planning for death, and administering after the loss of a loved one. He is also the CEO of Moneyfingers Inc., a company that trains people on how to successfully create, market, and sell products on the internet. When not burning the candle at both ends with a blowtorch, Mike loves video games, outdoor festivals, reading comics and novels, role-playing, writing and playing music, hanging out with the world's best cats, and spending time with his amazing wife and their collective worldwide friend-group.
In light of the intensifying climate crises we face today, Jeffrey Jerome Cohen and Julian Yates examine the opposing narratives of survival embodied by two birds in perhaps the most abiding of all Flood myths—Noah's Ark. Questioning the dove's familiar story of salvation for the few, they urge us to follow the raven into a new world of widened and inclusive refuge. Read this story. Explore more stories from Shifting Landscapes, our fourth print volume. Sign up for our newsletter to hear more stories as they are released each week. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ever since a balloon flew from China over the United States in February, concerns about surveillance have been at the forefront of U.S.-China relations. But the two countries have a long history of spying on each other. In this short explainer, John Delury contextualizes the current tensions and assesses just how worried Americans should be about Chinese espionage. If you missed it, listen to our interview from January with John Delury, Gina Tam, and Jerome Cohen on John's new book, Agents of Subversion: The Fate of John T. Downey and the CIA's Covert War in China. About the speaker: https://www.ncuscr.org/video/chinese-espionage/ Read the transcript of this conversation Follow John Delury on Twitter: @JohnDelury Subscribe to the National Committee on YouTube for video of this interview. Follow us on Twitter (@ncuscr) and Instagram (@ncuscr).
Agents of Subversion reconstructs the story of a botched mission into Manchuria, placing it in the context of a wider CIA campaign against China. In the winter of 1952, the CIA flew a covert mission into China to pick up an agent. One of the Americans on the mission, a recent Yale graduate named John T. Downey, ended up a prisoner in China for the next twenty years. The U.S. government kept the public in the dark about decades of covert activity directed against China while Downey languished in a Beijing prison and his mother lobbied desperately for his release. John Delury sheds new light on Mao's campaigns to eliminate counterrevolutionaries and on his use of captive spies in diplomacy with the West. In an interview conducted on January 25, 2023, John Delury and Jerome Cohen discuss Downey's story and its implication for today with Gina Tam. 0:00-2:11 introductions 2:11-11:03 Who was John Downey? 11:03-15:44 Cold War framework 15:44-23:16 What did it have to take for Downey's release? 23:16-29:10 CIA activity in China 29:10- U.S.-China cooperation About the speakers: https://www.ncuscr.org/event/agents-of-subversion-john-t-downey/ Read the transcript to this conversation Follow John Delury on Twitter: @JohnDelury Follow Jerome Cohen on Twitter: @jeromeacohen Follow Gina Tam on Twitter: @DGTam86 Subscribe to the National Committee on YouTube for video of this interview. Follow us on Twitter (@ncuscr) and Instagram (@ncuscr).
Five decades ago, China was closed off to the world. In 1972, Jerome Cohen was part of the first U.S. delegations to travel to China after Richard Nixon's historic visit. A pioneer in Chinese legal studies in the 1960s, he has been deeply involved in Sino-U.S. political, legal, and business developments in past half-century—from the hopeful early days of China's reform era in the 1980s to the far darker atmosphere of recent years. In this roundtable, Jerome Cohen, adjunct senior fellow for Asia at the Council on Foreign Relations and faculty director emeritus and founder of NYU Law School's US-Asia Law Institute, reflects on the trajectory of China and its legal system over the past five decades.
At the sixth month mark, the Biden administration's China policy differs only slightly from that of the previous administration. Relatively easy policy initiatives that could have benefited the American people seem to be on hold. The Senate has passed the Strategic Competition Act of 2021 which, if it becomes law as written, will restrict how the Executive Branch can deal with China. On July 22, 2021, the National Committee hosted a virtual program with National Committee President Stephen Orlins in conversation with NYU's U.S.-Asia Law Institute Founder and Faculty Director Emeritus Jerome Cohen. Mr. Orlins spoke in his personal capacity.
In the face of present-day environmental catastrophe and social injustice, Jeffrey Jerome Cohen and Julian Yates examine opposing narratives of survival in the story of Noah’s Ark, exemplified in the dove and the raven. While one symbolizes an exclusionary new world with a finite narrative arc and an inevitable conclusion, the other embodies the unexpected and unscripted—a widened refuge open to all. The contrasting fate of the birds prompts these two medieval scholars to consider how we will respond when our own survival is called into question. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In a belated celebration of his 90th birthday and his extraordinary contributions to the development of law in China and U.S.-China relations, the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations hosted a virtual discussion with America’s leading expert on Chinese law, Jerome A. Cohen, on February 16, 2021. Professor Cohen conversed with his former student, Steve Orlins, who is now president of the National Committee, about his experiences over the last sixty years of studying Chinese law, government, and society. Topics included living in China, prospects for the future of law in China, and directions in Sino-American relations.
In this live show taped at New York University on October 16, Jeremy and Kaiser spoke with Jerry Cohen, the doyen of American studies of Chinese law. We explore the legal foundations for the Hong Kong handover in 1997, and how imprecision has contributed to many of the difficulties playing out in Hong Kong's streets today.5:43: Ambiguity in Hong Kong Basic Law19:38: A look at the 2019 Hong Kong extradition bill32:35: Changing repercussions for detained and imprisoned Hongkongers37:59: Hong Kong’s legal system wilting under pressure from Beijing51:08: The Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019Recommendations:Jeremy: A series of oral histories by Ben Mauk, Weather Reports: Voices from Xinjiang.Jerry: The works of a few individuals shining a light on the atrocities occurring in Xinjiang: James Leibold, Jim Millward, and Adrian Zenz. Kaiser: Antisocial: Online Extremists, Techno-Utopians, and the Hijacking of the American Conversation, by Andrew Marantz.
In this narrated essay from our first issue on Perspective, medievalist Jeffrey Jerome Cohen examines the history of our attraction to see Earth from above. He wonders what an enlarged perspective might bring. Does it offer a deeper understanding of ourselves as Earthlings or is this attraction an indulgence in a dangerous fantasy that we might be free of the gravity, and complexity, of life on Earth. Jeffrey Jerome Cohen is the author of Stone: An Ecology of the Inhuman and Earth.
EXPOSED: WALL STREET SECRETS WARREN BUFFET DOES NOT TELL INVESTORS
The Federal Governments case against Jerome Cohen and Shaun Cohen Equitybuilder case is more SEC and FINRA coverup and crimes curated to keep the SEC and FINRA employees out of Law Enforcement hands. $135 million victim cash translated in fake SEC ALJ courts down to $5 million fine..... Please subscribe to my Podcast https://carriedevorah.podomatic.com Become our 'patreon', please
In this installment, Andrew Schlegel reads "Monster Culture: 7 Theses," an essay pulled from Dr. Cohen's book, "Monster Theory: Reading Culture." This piece examines what it means to be monstrous, as well as the processes by which someone or something becomes a monster and how we can interpret not only the "monsters" themselves, but the cultures and societies that create them.
U.S.-Taiwan relations have long been an ingenious balancing act of "strategic ambiguity." What does the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act entail and why is it important, not only to Taiwan, but to U.S.-China relations and indeed security across Asia? Legendary China expert Jerome Cohen unpacks the history of Taiwan since 1895, its current situation and legal status, and what this could mean for Asia and the United States.
U.S.-Taiwan relations have long been an ingenious balancing act of "strategic ambiguity." What does the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act entail and why is it important, not only to Taiwan, but to U.S.-China relations and indeed security across Asia? Legendary China expert Jerome Cohen unpacks the history of Taiwan since 1895, its current situation and legal status, and what this could mean for Asia and the United States.
Cymene and Dominic debate the Pet Rock as a capitalist or proto-new-materialist venture on this week’s episode of the podcast. Then (16:59) we welcome to the podcast multitalented environmental humanist and soon-to-be decanal superstar Jeffrey Jerome Cohen from Arizona State. With Jeffrey we talk about unsustainably hot desert cities as harbingers of the future and then quickly get to his fascinating book Stone: An Ecology of the Inhuman (U Minnesota Press, 2015) and its exploration of litho-human relationships both medieval and modern. Jeffrey explains how his work seeks to appreciate medieval ways of knowing. He argues that they might help us to reinvigorate our way of understanding the world today—not least by conceiving lithic materials as something more than inert resources—and improve our ethics of relationality with the more-than-human world. We talk about stones as transport devices in human storytelling and as archives of catastrophe, the Noah’s Ark trope, and fire as elemental force, human companion, and challenge to think with. We then turn to Jeffrey’s work on monsters, but mostly as a pretense to get him to tell us his Pixar lawsuit story. Finally we discuss his most recent book, Earth(Bloomsbury, 2017), co-authored with planetary geologist, Lindy Elkins-Tanton, and how we might imagine human life as part of planetary life more widely. Wondering why monsters and aliens are green? Listen on!
Jerome Cohen speaks at a Forum on Conflicts in the South China Sea, 19-20/10/17
In recent years, American universities have been setting up branches and full degree-granting campuses in China at a time when Chinese leaders are cracking down on so-called “Western values.” This has raised questions back in the States — including in the U.S. Congress — as to whether academic freedom is being compromised. In this episode, we look at the case of NYU Shanghai and what challenges American educational institutions face in China's current political environment.
In January, Taiwan's voters handed the traditionally pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) a landslide victory, giving it control of the parliament and presidency for the first time ever. The outcome is just the latest of many signals that Taiwanese are growing more skeptical of mainland China, which appears to be failing in its long-running strategy to entice the self-governing island back peacefully. In this fifth episode of the Asia Society Podcast, we explore how Taiwan has continued to drift further away from the mainland psychologically, and what the implications could be of a new Taiwanese government that's less friendly with Beijing.
Host: Alan S. Brown, MD, FNLA Health information technologies have evolved dramatically from simplistic documentation devices early on to sophisticated drivers of quality patient care today. This emergence is having a particularly positive effect on treatment for dyslipidemia. Joining host Dr. Alan Brown to reflect on a recent NLA manuscript of HIT's impact toward adherence to lipid therapy is Dr. Jerome Cohen, Emeritus Professor of Internal Medicine at Saint Louis University School of Medicine and Director of Preventative Cardiology Program at the Saint Louis University Health Sciences Center. Dr. Cohen has been active in cardiovascular research for more than two decades.
Guest: Jerome D. Cohen, MD Host: Alan S. Brown, MD, FNLA Statins play a critical role in reducing the risk of heart disease. Not only are the benefits greatly appreciated by both physicians and patients, the majority of statins are also well tolerated. Despite this, many patients discontinue statin therapy against medical advice, oftentimes without notifying their doctors. For this reason, the National Lipid Association embarked on a study that used internet surveys to determine why patients discontinue their statins. This was called the USAGE Study, and its results are the subject of this discussion. Host, Dr. Alan Brown welcomes Dr. Jerome Cohen, emeritus professor of Internal Medicine at St. Louis University School of Medicine. For more information on the USAGE survey, including resources for patients and healthcare providers, please visit the USAGE website at www.StatinUSAGE.com. Brought to you by:
Jerome Cohen '55 Professor and Co-Director of the US Asia Law Institute at NYU, gave a three-part lecture series at the Yale Law School in Feb 2010. This third lecture is entitled "Academic, Scholarly, and Law Reform Interaction with China".
Guest: Jerome D. Cohen, MD Host: Larry Kaskel, MD Dr. Jerome Cohen, emeritus professor of internal medicine at Saint Louis University School of Medicine and director of Preventive Cardiology Programs at the Saint Louis University Health Sciences Center, joins host Dr. Larry Kaskel to discuss the results of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES), which show that, while LDL cholesterol levels are falling, triglyceride levels in the United States are skyrocketing. These levels are five times higher than the NHANES data of the 1970s. How can we educate our patients about the serious risks associated with triglycerides, which are often ignored when addressing cardiovascular disease? Brought to you by:
Guest: Jerome D. Cohen, MD Host: Larry Kaskel, MD Dr. Kaskel welcomes Dr. Jerome Cohen to Lipid Luminations. Dr. Cohen is a cardiologist and professor of medicine and cardiology at St. Louis University where he also serves as the director of preventive cardiology. They will be delving into the controversial issues of The Enhance Study plus discussing what doctors should be recommending in the wake of the results. Brought to you by:
Guest: Jerome D. Cohen, MD Host: Larry Kaskel, MD Join Dr. Larry Kaskel as he welcomes Dr. Jerome Cohen, cardiologist and professor of medicine and cardiology at St. Louis University to speak about his published algorithm addressing preventive cardiology. The interview marks the first in a series entitled, "Lipid Luminations". Brought to you by:
Guest: Jerome D. Cohen, MD Host: Larry Kaskel, MD Dr. Jerome Cohen, director of preventive cardiology at St. Louis University, joins Dr. Larry Kaskel to discuss statins and how they are sold, from the 'behind-the-counter' perspective in the UK, to the potential of OTC here in the US.