视觉传达
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I have noticed that in many foreign films and television shows, when female names are translated into Chinese characters, they are often altered, distorted, or even given sexual connotations. This reflects the deep-seated societal stereotypes and neglect toward women, as well as the translator's attempt to mislead and discipline women's self-awareness.
In recent years, with the increasing consumption of foie gras, the force-feeding cultivation process has brutally compelled animals to exceed their natural growth boundaries. To meet market demands, animals have endured unbearable suffering, becoming tools of ethical violence imposed by humans. As Kant stated in "On the Duties to Animals and the Soul": "Animals lack self-consciousness and are therefore merely means toward an end. That end is human..." Our responsibility towards animals is fundamentally a moral and ethical responsibility.
This project explores child development within the context of East Asian societal norms and trauma-based education. Drawing from my personal experiences, it examines how children from divorced families often face heightened emotional dependency and compensatory dynamics, leading to excessive parental control and protection. I designed a narrative game that allows players to adopt different family members' perspectives through a puzzle-based medium. This game investigates role conflicts and psychological tensions between parents and children, aiming to foster new insights and reconciliation regarding the "distorted" family bonds and intimate relationships in traditional East Asian environments.
This project begins with a unique bodily experience: the existence and removal of the sixth toe, exploring the boundary between "excess" and "norm." As a biological "anomaly," the sixth toe and its medicalized removal process reveal society's mechanisms for disciplining the "normal" body—rejecting and correcting deviations from established norms. This "correction" reflects biopower over the body while also pointing to the forced normalization of perception, where "excess" becomes something to be suppressed and eliminated.