Celine Parrenas Shimizu

Celine Parreñas Shimizu
Born (1969-12-28) December 28, 1969
Philippines
Website www.celineshimizu.com
Academic background
Alma mater Stanford University
Academic work
Institutions University of California at Santa Barbara
Main interests Filmmaker and film scholar
Notable works Straitjacket Sexualities: Unbinding Asian American Manhoods in the Movies

Celine Parreñas Shimizu (born December 28, 1969) is an award-winning filmmaker and film scholar.

Background

Shimizu is the daughter of political refugees from the Philippines. Her family relocated to Boston when she was in her early teens. She attended the University of California at Berkeley and received a B.A. in Ethnic Studies in 1992.[1] She has an M.F.A. in Film Directing and Production from the University of California at Los Angeles[2] and a Ph.D. from Stanford University in Modern Thought and Literature.[3] She is married to Daniel P Shimizu with whom she has two sons.

Career

Shimizu is a Professor of Film and Performance Studies in the Asian American, Comparative Literature, Feminist, and Film and Media Studies Departments at the University of California at Santa Barbara. She is well known for her work on race, sexuality and representations.

Her sole-authored books include Straitjacket Sexualities: unbinding Asian American Manhoods in the Movies.[4] The book studies scenes of cinematic intimacy in the forging of ethical manhoods on and off screen for Asian American men. Her first book The Hypersexuality of Race: Performing Asian/American Women on Screen and Scene[5] won the Cultural Studies Book Award from the Association for Asian American Studies. In it, she analyzes hypersexual representations of Asian American women in various media including industry and independent film, pornography and feminist video. She edited the book The Feminist Porn Book: The Politics of Producing Pleasure along with Constance Penley, Mireille Miller-Young, and Tristan Taormino.[6]

Shimizu’s publications include interviews and articles in the journals Concentric, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, Wide Angle, Theatre Journal, Yale Journal of Law and Feminism, Journal of Asian American Studies and Sexualities. She served as a columnist for the new media journal FLOWTV.org in 2009 and blogger on the They're All So Beautiful web series in 2013.

Recently, her first feature film Birthright: Mothering Across Difference (2009) won the Best Feature Documentary at the Big Mini DV Festival. Her previous filmworks include Mahal Means Love and Expensive (1993), Her Uprooting Plants Her (1995), Super Flip (1997) and The Fact of Asian Women (2002/4), which won four festival awards.

She teaches popular culture, social theories of power and inequality, race and sexuality, feminist and film and performance theory as well as television and film production.

For her scholarship and film work, Dr. Parreñas Shimizu has received many additional awards, fellowships, grants and honors including the Social Science Research Council Sexuality Research Fellowship, the Stanford Asian American Studies Graduate Academic Award, the Edie and Lew Wasserman Directing Fellowship, the James Pendleton Foundation Directing Prize and the Eisner Prize for Poetry—UC Berkeley’s highest award in the creative arts.

While at the University of California at Berkeley, she founded "smell this", the magazine by and about women of color distributed by Third Woman Press and edited Tea Leaves, the Asian American arts and literary magazine as well as the undergraduate journal portfolio. At UCLA School of Theatre, Film and Television, she was founding president of the student body organization.

As a faculty member, Shimizu’s service and professional activity includes the leadership of the UCSB Senior Women's Council in 2007-09, and serving on the board of the University of California Committee on Academic Freedom, the UCSB Committee on Faculty Issues and Awards, UCSB Women's Center, the UCSB Interdisciplinary Humanities Center and the UCSB Center for Interdisciplinary Study of Music as well as serving as a jury member for the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival and the Social Justice Award for Documentary at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. She looks forward to serving on the board of The Fund for Santa Barbara for which she was recently elected. She convened the inaugural formation of the New Sexualities research focus group at UCSB. And she co-chaired the Asian Pacific Caucus for the Society for Cinema and Media Studies in 2008-10.

On a national level, she is a reviewer for the Ford Foundation Diversity Fellowships and the National Endowment for the Humanities' America's Media Makers Program. For New York University, Rutgers University, Temple University, University of Michigan Presses, and journals such as Signs, GLQ, and Frontiers she reviews articles and books.

Professor Shimizu advises undergraduate and graduate students in a wide variety of disciplines as well as interdisciplinary areas of inquiry at UCSB and beyond.

Publications

Sole-authored books

  • Winner, 2007 Cultural Studies Book Award, Association for Asian American Studies

Edited books

Journal articles

Digital humanities

Book chapters

Interviews

Book Reviews

A review of: Gopinath, Gayatri (2005). Impossible desires: queer diasporas and South Asian public cultures. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822335139. 

Films

Awards, Prizes and Distribution

For The Hypersexuality of Race: Winner, 2007 Cultural Studies Book Award, Association for Asian American Studies

For Birthright: Winner, Best Feature Documentary, Big Mini DV Festival, New York, November 2009. Distribution: Progressive Films.

For The Fact of Asian Women: Winner, Best Documentary Short, Big Mini DV Film Festival, New York, 2002; Winner, Best Picture, Women’s Issues, ZoieFest 2003. Winner in Long Format-Education, DV Awards, 2003. Winner, Best of Festival—Documentary, Berkeley Film and Video Festival 2003; Distribution: Third World Newsreel. (Fall 2004)

For Super Flip: Motion Picture Association of America Directing Award; Edie and Lew Wasserman Directing Fellowship, 1995-96. World Premiere: Pacific Film Archive, 1996.

For Her Uprooting Plants Her: Distribution: Third World Newsreel.

For Mahal Means Love and Expensive: Certificate of Merit, Berkeley Experimental Festival, 1995; Certificate of Merit, Long Island Film Festival, 1995 and Motion Picture Association of America Prize.

Screenings

Los Angeles Asian American Film Festival, Chicago Asian American Film Festival, Women in the Directors’ Chair International Film Festival in Chicago, Directors’ Guild of America, Arkipelago-NYU Film Festival, New York International Film and Video Festival, Memories of Overdevelopment – U.S., Canada and Latin America, Japanese American Cultural Center in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Los Angeles Filipino Film Festivals, Society for Cinema Studies, Kansas, SF Cinematheque, San Francisco Asian American International Festival, and Plug-In Gallery, Canada, Smithsonian Institution, Los Angeles Asian American Film Festival, Japanese American Cultural Center in Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles Filipino Film Festivals; Japanese American Cultural Center in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Los Angeles Filipino Film Festivals, Society for Cinema Studies, Kansas, Long Island Festival in New York, San Francisco International Film Festival, Philippine Consulate – New York.

Film Collections include

Georgetown University, University of Michigan, University of Massachusetts at Boston; University of Vermont; Temple University, San Francisco State University; Asian CineVision; Visual Communications; Film Arts Foundation; NAATA; University of Hawaii; University of Wisconsin at Madison; Stanford University; Santa Clara University; Northwestern University; Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada; and University of California Berkeley, Davis, Riverside, Los Angeles, and Santa Barbara.

Other Publications, Radio and TV Documentaries

Interview with Desiree Gamotin, “Hypersexuality of Asian women, minorities: Despite stereotypes, race-positive sexuality is attainable” February 11, 2009 University of Western Ontario Gazette.

Interview with Adrienne Clarke . “Professor Discusses Book on Sexuality in Asian Film” in the Daily Targum, Rutgers University. November 12, 2008.

Interview with Sara Wright, “The Hypersexuality of Asian Women in Film and Other Media: Ridding the Exotification of Asian Women” Mustang Daily, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. May 8, 2008. Interview with Jori Lewis, “Black Eyed Peas’ Bebot on Public Radio International’s The World. January 5, 2007.

Interview with Poonam Sharma, “Hot or Not” in Audrey Magazine. July 2004.

Poetry in Nick Carbo and Eileen Tabios, Babaylan: Filipina and Filipina American Literary Anthology. San Francisco: Aunt Lute Press, 2000.

"Asian American Media Representations” Featured panelist on Forum/ National Public Radio, July 1998.

Featured Cover Artist in Sau Ling Wong, Critical Mass. Online Journal. UCBerkeley, 1998.

Featured Filmmaker in Yong Soon Min, Memories of Overdevelopment. Exhibition Catalogue. Irvine, 1997.

Poetry in Elaine Kim, et al. Making More Waves, Beacon Press, Boston, 1997.

Poetry in Walter K. Lew, ed. Premonitions, KAYA Press, New York. 1996.

Editor-in-chief, smell this: women of color cultural production, Berkeley: Third Woman Press. 1990, 1992.

References

  1. "Home page". ethnicstudies.berkeley.edu. University of California at Berkeley.
  2. "Home page". tft.ucla.edu. School of Theater, Film and Television, UCLA.
  3. "Home page". stanford.edu. Stanford University.
  4. Shimizu, Celine Parreñas (2012). Straitjacket sexualities: unbinding Asian American manhoods in the movies. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804773010.
  5. Shimizu, Celine Parreñas (2007). The hypersexuality of race: performing Asian/American women on screen and scene. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822340331.
  6. Shimizu, Celine Parreñas; Taormino, Tristan; Penley, Constance; Miller-Young, Mireille (2013). The feminist porn book: the politics of producing pleasure. New York, NY: Feminist Press at the City University of New York. ISBN 9781558618183.
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