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Hibakusha Cinema Mick Broderick

Hibakusha Cinema By Mick Broderick

Hibakusha Cinema by Mick Broderick


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Summary

Hibakusha is a Japanese subgenre of cinema which dealt with the atom bombs of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This text provides an historical approach to this genre within its social context. The essays explore the metatextuality of Hiroshima and Nagaski via film and television readings.

Hibakusha Cinema Summary

Hibakusha Cinema: Hiroshima, Nagasaki and the Nuclear Image in Japanese Film by Mick Broderick

First Published in 1996. This collection of works is in response to American film scholar and long-term resident of Japan, Donald Richie, words: The Japanese failure to come to terms with Hiroshima is one which is shared by everybody in the world today, from over thirty years ago, when responding to the Japanese subgenre of cinema which had dealt with the atom bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Three decades on, the question lingers, does this appraisal remain valid? Hibakusha Cinema is an attempt - perhaps momentarily - to reorient critical focus upon a rarely discussed, yet important feature of Japanese cinema. The essays collected here represent a mix of Japanese and western (pan-Pacific) scholarship harnessing multidisciplinary methodologies, ranging from close textual analysis, archival and historical argument, anthropological assessment, literary and film comparative analyses to psychological and ideological hermeneutics.

About Mick Broderick

Mick Broderick is author of Nuclear Movies (1991), is completing a PhD in apocalyptic narrative and currently works for the Australian Film Commission in Sydney, Australia. He has published widely on nuclear themes in film, and was invited by Physicians for Social Responsibility to co-curate The Atomic Age in Film Series, a retrospective of nuclear cinema screened in Los Angeles throughout 1995.

Table of Contents

Introduction, Broderick Mick; Chapter 1 Mono no aware: Hiroshima in Film, Richie Donald; Chapter 2 The Imagination of Disaster, Sontag Susan; Chapter 3 Godzilla and the Japanese Nightmare: When Them! is U.S., Noriega Chon A; Chapter 4 Emperor Tomato-Ketchup: Cartoon Properties From Japan, Crawford Ben; Chapter 5 Akira and the Postnuclear Sublime, Freiberg Freda; Chapter 6 Depiction of the Atomic Bombings in Japanese Cinema During the U.S. Occupation Period, Hirano Kyoko; Chapter 7 The Body at the Center The Effects of the Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Norms Abe Mark; Chapter 8 The Extremes of Innocence: Kurosawas Dreams and Rhapsodies, Ehrlich Linda C; Chapter 9 Akira Kurosawa and the Atomic Age, Goodwin James; Chapter 10 Narrative Strategies of Understatement in Black Rain as a Novel and a Film, Dorsey John T., Matsuoka Naomi; Chapter 11 Death and the Maiden: Female Hibakusha as Cultural Heroines, and the Politics of A-bomb Memory, Todeschini Maya Morioka;

Additional information

NPB9780710305299
9780710305299
071030529X
Hibakusha Cinema: Hiroshima, Nagasaki and the Nuclear Image in Japanese Film by Mick Broderick
New
Hardback
Kegan Paul
1996-01-08
256
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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