Making Icons: Repetition and the Female Image in Japanese Cinema, 1945–1964
Autor Jennifer Coatesen Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 feb 2017
One
distinctive
feature
of
post-war
Japanese
cinema
is
the
frequent
recurrence
of
imagistic
and
narrative
tropes
and
formulaic
characterizations
in
female
representations.
These
repetitions
are
important,
Jennifer
Coates
asserts,
because
sentiments
and
behaviours
forbidden
during
the
war
and
post-war
social
and
political
changes
were
often
articulated
by
or
through
the
female
image.
Moving
across
major
character
types,
from
mothers
to
daughters,
and
schoolteachers
to
streetwalkers,
Making
Icons
studies
the
role
of
the
media
in
shaping
the
attitudes
of
the
general
public.
Japanese
cinema
after
the
defeat
is
shown
to
be
an
important
ground
where
social
experiences
were
explored,
reworked,
and
eventually
accepted
or
rejected
by
the
audience
emotionally
invested
in
these
repetitive
materials.
An
examination
of
600
films
produced
and
distributed
between
1945
and
1964,
as
well
as
numerous
Japanese-language
sources,
forms
the
basis
of
this
rigorous
study.
Making
Icons
draws
on
an
art-historical
iconographic
analysis
to
explain
how
viewers
derive
meanings
from
images
during
this
peak
period
of
film
production
and
attendance
in
Japan.
Preț: 407.97 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 612
Preț estimativ în valută:
72.19€ • 84.65$ • 63.40£
72.19€ • 84.65$ • 63.40£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 16-30 ianuarie 26
Livrare express 01-07 ianuarie 26 pentru 38.16 lei
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789888208999
ISBN-10: 9888208993
Pagini: 244
Ilustrații: 25 b&w illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Hong Kong University Press
Colecția Hong Kong University Press
ISBN-10: 9888208993
Pagini: 244
Ilustrații: 25 b&w illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Hong Kong University Press
Colecția Hong Kong University Press
Recenzii
‘It
is
very
difficult
not
to
heap
superlatives
upon
Making
Icons.
This
splendid
work
sheds
a
shining
light
on
the
situation
of
women
in
post-war
Japan,
and
on
post-war
Japan
itself.
Not
only
is
this
a
deft
reading
of
text
and
context,
it
expands
the
very
‘This
is
a
compelling
book.
I
am
excited
by
Jennifer
Coates’s
art-historically
informed
iconographic
approach
towards
female
representation
in
post-war
Japanese
cinema.
Making
Icons
will
certainly
make
a
splash
in
the
field
of
Japanese
film
studies.’
—Dai
Notă biografică
Jennifer
Coates
is
an
assistant
professor
in
the
Graduate
School
of
Letters
and
Hakubi
Research
Center
at
Kyoto
University.
Her
research
interests
include
gender,
popular
culture,
audience,
and
memory
studies.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
Film
Studies
/
Japanese
Studies
/
Gender
Studies
Descriere
One
distinctive
feature
of
post-war
Japanese
cinema
is
the
frequent
recurrence
of
imagistic
and
narrative
tropes
and
formulaic
characterizations
in
female
representations.
These
repetitions
are
important,
Jennifer
Coates
asserts,
because
sentiments
and
behaviours
forbidden
during
the
war
and
post-war
social
and
political
changes
were
often
articulated
by
or
through
the
female
image.
Moving
across
major
character
types,
from
mothers
to
daughters,
and
schoolteachers
to
streetwalkers,
Making
Icons
studies
the
role
of
the
media
in
shaping
the
attitudes
of
the
general
public.
Japanese
cinema
after
the
defeat
is
shown
to
be
an
important
ground
where
social
experiences
were
explored,
reworked,
and
eventually
accepted
or
rejected
by
the
audience
emotionally
invested
in
these
repetitive
materials.
An
examination
of
600
films
produced
and
distributed
between
1945
and
1964,
as
well
as
numerous
Japanese-language
sources,
forms
the
basis
of
this
rigorous
study.
Making
Icons
draws
on
an
art-historical
iconographic
analysis
to
explain
how
viewers
derive
meanings
from
images
during
this
peak
period
of
film
production
and
attendance
in
Japan.