1st Edition

Japanese Visual Media Politicizing the Screen

By Jennifer Coates, Eyal Ben-Ari Copyright 2022
    232 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    232 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book uncovers and explains the ways by which politics is naturalized and denaturalized, and familiarized and de-familiarized through popular media. It explores the tensions between state actors such as censors, politicized and nonpoliticized audiences, and visual media creators, at various points in the history of Japanese visual media. It offers new research on a wide array of visual media texts including classical narrative cinema, television, documentary film, manga, and animated film. It spans the militarized decades of the 1930s and 1940s, through the Asia Pacific War into the present day, and demonstrates how processes of politicization and depoliticization should be understood as part of wider historical developments including Japan’s postwar devastation and poverty, subsequent rapid modernization and urbanization, and the aging population and economic struggles of the twenty-first century.

    Introduction
    JENNIFER COATES AND EYAL BEN- ARI

    SECTION A
    Historical contexts

    1 A question of form: dissent and the nouvelle vague
    ISOLDE STANDISH

    2 Negotiating sex, the bizarre, and politics: the Abe Sada incident in films
    KATSUYUKI HIDAKA

    3 The four lives of Matsugorō the Lawless: agency, constraint, and what is "worthy" of film censorship in trans-war Japan
    IRIS HAUKAMP

    4 Tarzan and Japan: racial portraits of a nation in Boy Kenya
    DEANNA T. NARDY

    SECTION B
    Critique, contestation, and resistan
    ce

    5 Down in the dumps: Tokyo wastelands and marginalized groups in Japanese film and anime
    ALISA FREEDMAN

    6 Cinema at the edge of the world: visions of precarity in the films of Kumakiri Kazuyoshi
    LINDSAY NELSON

    7 How to remember 3.11? Post-Fukushima documentary and the politics of Tōhoku Documentary Trilogy
    (2011–2013)
    RAN MA

    SECTION C
    Creating the political subject through media

    8 The Japanese self-defence forces and cinematic productions: resonance and reverberation in the normalization of organized state violence
    ATSUKO FUKUURA AND EYAL BEN-ARI

    9 Politicizing the audience? Film fans’ experiences of cinema in the 1960s
    JENNIFER COATES

    10 Fading away from the screen: cinematic responses to queer ageing in contemporary Japanese cinema
    YUTAKA KUBO

     

    Biography

    Jennifer Coates is a senior lecturer in Japanese studies in the School of East Asian Studies, University of Sheffield, UK.

    Eyal Ben-Ari
    is director of the Kinneret Center for Society, Security and Peace, Israel.