A New History Of Japanese Cinema: A Century Of Narrative Film

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2005-04-01
Publisher(s): Bloomsbury USA Academic
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Summary

Cinema, which first arrived in Japan in 1896 with the Kinetoscope prototype, came at the very time that Japan was transforming its economic base and society into that of a major international power. The first cinema, the Asakusa Denkikan, was opened in Tokyo in 1903 and within thirteen years three hundred cinemas had sprung up throughout the country. In A New History of Japanese Cinema: A Century of Narrative Film, Isolde Standish focuses on the historical development of Japanese film. She details an industry and an art form shaped by the competing and merging forces of traditional culture and of economic and technological innovation. Adopting a thematic, exploratory approach, Standish links the concept of Japanese cinema as a system of communication with some of the central discourses of the twentieth century: modernism, nationalism, humanism, resistance, and gender.

Author Biography

Isolde Standish lectures in Film Studies and is the convenor of the MA Cinemas of Asia and Africa degree at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgmentsp. 9
Notes on Translationp. 11
Introduction: Towards a Politics of Cinemap. 13
Cinema, Modernity and the Shochiku Tokyo Studiosp. 29
Cinema, Nationalism and Empirep. 80
Cinema and the Statep. 133
Cinema and Humanismp. 174
Cinema and Transgressionp. 220
Genres and Genderp. 270
Reflectionsp. 327
Notesp. 343
Select Filmographyp. 365
Select Bibliographyp. 387
Indexp. 397
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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