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Japanese Cinema [Multiple-component retail product]

Edited by (University of Nottingham), Edited by (Nottingham Trent University)
  • Formāts: Multiple-component retail product, 1936 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 3401 g, Contains 4 hardbacks
  • Sērija : Critical Concepts in Media and Cultural Studies
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Sep-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415530393
  • ISBN-13: 9780415530392
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  • Formāts: Multiple-component retail product, 1936 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 3401 g, Contains 4 hardbacks
  • Sērija : Critical Concepts in Media and Cultural Studies
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Sep-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415530393
  • ISBN-13: 9780415530392
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Japanese cinema is historically one of the world’s most important national film industries and one that continues to have a significant global influence. From the Golden Age of the 1930s and the 1950s art-house success of Kurosawa, Mizoguchi, and Ozu to the 1960s New Wave of Imamura and Oshima and the ubiquitous contemporary presence of sci-fi and anime, Japan has produced directors and genres of central importance to the development of cinema as both art and industry. Indeed, no college or university course on international film history or modern world cinema is complete without substantial reference to Japan’s mighty achievements.

Despite the crucial contribution of work on Japan to the development of Film Studies as a distinct object of intellectual inquiry, as well as the ongoing vibrancy of Japanese Cinema Studies as a dynamic interdisciplinary endeavour, to date no reference work has gathered all the most important scholarly writings on the topic. This welcome addition to Routledge’s Critical Concepts in Media and Cultural Studies series remedies that omission. It presents for the first time the most significant English-language work on the history and culture of Japanese cinema.

Edited by two leading scholars in the field, this major new reference resource offers a multi-dimensional overview of one hundred years of filmmaking in Japan. It explores the subject from all key angles, encompassing production and the role of commercial film studios, distribution, exhibition, issues of critical reception, fandom, and the cultural status of cinema as aesthetic medium. Every major period is represented, including early and silent cinema, the years of empire and war, postwar resurgence and political strife, globalization and multimedia reconfiguration. In addition, the collection includes consideration of key films and filmmakers, alongside approaches to Japanese cinema’s perceived uniqueness and debates on its relation to society, as well as to Hollywood and other film industries. Contributions are drawn from the various disciplines where the most important work on Japanese cinema has been produced, including Film Studies, Japan Studies, Asian Studies, and Cultural Studies.

Japanese Cinema is supplemented by a comprehensive index. It also includes a full introduction, newly written by the editors, which outlines the various historical contexts for the emergence of mature scholarly approaches to the subject.

Acknowledgements xv
Chronological table of reprinted articles and chapters xviii
VOLUME I JAPANESE FILM HISTORIOGRAPHY: ISSUES AND DEBATES
General Introduction 1(1)
Nikki J. Y. Lee
Julian Stringer
PART 1 Key Positions
19(126)
1 The Japanese film: a personal view -- 1947--1995
21(15)
Donald Richie
2 The mysterious Orient, the crystal clear Orient, the non-existent Orient: dilemmas of Western scholars of Japanese film
36(14)
Peter Lehman
3 Japanese cinema in search of a discipline
50(40)
Mitsuhiro Yoshimoto
4 Film criticism and the study of cinema in Japan: a historical survey
90(17)
Kenji Iwamoto
5 Returning to actuality: fukeiron and the landscape film
107(20)
Yuriko Furuhata
6 'Neo-documentarism' in Funeral Parade of Roses: the new realism of Matsumoto Toshio
127(18)
Mika Ko
PART 2 The Silent Era
145(172)
7 Some Characteristics Of Japanese Cinema Before World War I
147(29)
Komatsu Hiroshi
8 The Motion Pictures As A Problem
176(30)
Aaron Gerow
9 The Present And Future Of Moving Pictures: Katsudo Shashin No Genzai To Shorai, 1917
206(9)
Tanizaki Jun'ichiro
10 Developing Images, Defining Words
215(29)
Joanne Bernardi
11 Before Anime: Animation And The Pure Film Movement In Pre-War Japan
244(19)
Daisuke Miyao
12 The Creation Of Modern Space
263(27)
Mitsuyo Wada-Marciano
13 The Benshi Track: Mizoguchi Kenji's The Downfall Of Osen And The Sound Transition
290(27)
Chika Kinoshita
PART 3 Constructing Classical Cinema
317
14 Visual Style In Japanese Cinema, 1925--1945
319(44)
David Bordwell
15 Extracts From To The Distant Observer: Form And Meaning In The Japanese Cinema
363(30)
Noel Burch
16 Turning Serious: Yamanaka Sadao's Humanity And Paper Balloons (1937)
393(13)
Freda Freiberg
17 The International Film Culture Of Japan
406(32)
Donald Kirihara
18 Approaching The Monumental Style
438(36)
Darrell William Davis
19 The Men Who Tread On The Tiger's Tail
474
Akira Kurosawa
VOLUME II POST-1945: AUTHORSHIP AND GENRE
Acknowledgements viii
PART 4 Approaches To The Post-War Industry
1(108)
20 New Sequence: 1945--1949
3(18)
Joseph L. Anderson
Donald Richie
21 Star Gazing: Sight Lines And Studio Brands In Post-War Japanese Film Posters
21(18)
Colleen A. Laird
22 Buddha: Selling An Asian Spectacle
39(27)
Jasper Sharp
23 The Anticipation Of Freedom: Art Theatre Guild And Japanese Independent Cinema
66(13)
Roland Domenig
24 The Language Of The Blockbuster: Promotion, Princess Mononoke And The Daihitto In Japanese Film Culture
79(14)
Rayna Denison
25 Reflections: Cross-Cultural Perspectives Or Do Japanese Films Exist?
93(16)
Isolde Standish
PART 5 Authorship Case Study: Ozu Yasujiro
109(120)
26 Script
111(35)
Donald Richie
27 The Space Of Equinox Flower
146(34)
Edward Branigan
28 Sunny Skies
180(8)
Hasumi Shigehiko
29 The All-Important Archeo-Cinematic Scene
188(16)
Yoshida Kiju
30 Tokyo Story Through Western Eyes: The Occidental Appreciation Of Ozu's Art
204(9)
H. C. Li
31 Pictures Of The Past In The Present: Modernity, Femininity And Stardom In The Postwar Films Of Ozu Yasujiro
213(16)
Alastair Phillips
PART 6 Exploring Genres
229
32 Yakuza-Eiga: A Primer
231(16)
Paul Schrader
33 Toward A Structural Analysis Of The Postwar Samurai Film
247(19)
David Desser
34 Shoot-Out In Hokkaido: The "Wanderer" (Wataridori) Series And The Politics Of Transnationality
266(15)
Hiroshi Kitamura
35 The Innovation Of Prokino
281(34)
Abe Mark Nornes
36 Invading The Realm Of Privacy
315(3)
Hara Kazuo
37 "Overcoming Modernity": Gender And The Pathos Of History In Japanese Film Melodrama
318(22)
Catherine Russell
38 The Original And The Copy: Nakata Hideo's Ring (1998)
340
Julian Stringer
VOLUME III CINEMA AND SOCIETY
Acknowledgements viii
PART 7 Understanding Cultural Regulation
1(164)
39 From Film Colony To Film Sphere
3(30)
Michael Baskett
40 The Glory Days Of The Kulturfilm
33(48)
Peter B. High
41 The Strikes At Toho Studio
81(33)
Kyoko Hirano
42 Dirt For Politics' Sake: The Black Snow Trial (1965--1969)
114(31)
Kirsten Cather
43 Text Of Plea
145(20)
Nagisa Oshima
PART 8 Star Identities
165(106)
44 Benshi As Stars: The Irony Of The Popularity And Respectability Of Voice Performers In Japanese Cinema
167(16)
Hideaki Fujiki
45 A Star Is Born: The Transnational Success Of The Cheat And Its Race And Gender Politics
183(31)
Daisuke Miyao
46 A Star By Any Other Name: The (After) Lives Of Li Xianglan
214(14)
Shelley Stephenson
47 Ishihara Yujiro: Youth, Celebrity, And The Male Body In Late-1950S Japan
228(15)
Michael Raine
48 Television Is Only The Modern Age
243(28)
Casio Abe
PART 9 Gender And Sexuality
271(160)
49 In The Twilight Of Modernity And The Silent Film: Irie Takako In The Water Magician
273(26)
Chika Kinoshita
50 The Shape Of Freedom: The Female Body In Post-Surrender Japanese Cinema
299(43)
Joanne Izbicki
51 Daring To Be First: The Japanese Woman Director Tazuko Sakane (1904--1971)
342(17)
Keiko Mcdonald
52 Facts, Fictions And Fantasy
359(26)
Isolde Standish
53 Japan's Progressive Sex: Male Homosexuality, National Competition, And The Cinema
385(46)
Jonathan M. Hall
PART 10 Social Conflict And Cultural Upheaval
431
54 Modernization Without Modernity: Masumura Yasuzo's Giants And Toys (1958)
433(16)
Michael Raine
55 Cruel Stories Of Youth
449(32)
David Desser
56 The Sanrizuka Series
481(63)
Abe Mark Nornes
57 Messages In A Bottle: An Interview With Filmmaker Masao Adachi
544(31)
Harry Harootunian
Sabu Kohso
Go Hirasawa
58 Political Correctness, Postcoloniality, And The Self-Representation Of "Koreanness" In Japan
575(22)
Koichi Iwabuchi
59 Cosmetic Multiculturalism And Contemporary Japanese Cinema
597
Mika Ko
VOLUME IV TRANSNATIONAL JAPANESE CINEMA
Acknowledgements vii
PART 11 Production: Historical Dimensions
1(140)
60 The New Earth (1936/37): A German--Japanese Misalliance In Film
3(11)
Janine Hansen
61 The Golden Age Of Hong Kong--Japanese Collaboration
14(44)
Yau Shuk-Ting
Kinnia
62 High And Low: Art Cinema And Pulp Fiction In Yokohama
58(17)
Matthew Bernstein
63 The Past Won't Return: Remembering Dersu Uzala
75(18)
Teruyo Nogami
64 The Power Of Small Screens
93(20)
Darrell William Davis
Emilie Yueh-Yu Yeh
65 Global America? American--Japanese Film Co-Productions From Shogun (1980) To The Grudge 2 (2006) Via Lost In Translation (2003)
113(28)
Yoshiharu Tezuka
PART 12 Consumption And Audience Studies
141(142)
66 Japan 1951--1970: National Cinema As Cultural Currency
143(16)
Julian Stringer
67 Consuming Asia: Chinese And Japanese Popular Culture And The American Imaginary
159(23)
David Desser
68 Techno-Orientalism: Japan Panic
182(29)
David Morley
Kevin Robins
69 Taking "Japanization" Seriously: Cultural Globalization Reconsidered
211(19)
Koichi Iwabuchi
70 Choosing America: Eiga No Tomo And The Making Of A New Fan Culture
230(23)
Hiroshi Kitamura
71 Apocalypse In Fantasy And Reality: Japanese Pop Culture In Contemporary Russia
253(17)
Yulia Mikhailova
72 Learning Bushido From Abroad: Japanese Reactions To The Last Samurai
270(13)
Jayson Makoto Chun
PART 13 Anime As Global Brand
283(104)
73 Akira And The Post Nuclear Sublime
285(9)
Freda Freiberg
74 Confronting Master Narratives: History As Vision In Miyazaki Hayao's Cinema Of De-Assurance
294(21)
Susan J. Napier
75 The Ghost In The City And A Landscape Of Life: A Reading Of Difference In Shirow And Oshii's Ghost In The Shell
315(25)
Giorgio Hadi Curti
76 The First Time As Farce: Digital Animation And The Repetition Of Cinema
340(23)
Thomas Lamarre
77 Progress Against The Law: Anime And Fandom, With The Key To The Globalization Of Culture
363(24)
Sean Leonard
Index 387
Edited and with a new introduction by Nikki J. Y. Lee, Nottingham Trent University; and Julian Stringer, University of Nottingham