1st Edition

Myth and Masculinity in the Japanese Cinema Towards a Political Reading of the Tragic Hero

By Isolde Standish Copyright 2000
    242 Pages
    by Routledge

    254 Pages
    by Routledge

    This study argues that in Japanese popular cinema the 'tragic hero' narrative is an archetypal plot-structure upon which male genres, such as the war-retro and yakuza films are based. Two central questions in relation to these post-war Japanese film genres and historical consciousness are addressed: What is the relationship between history, myth and memory? And how are individual subjectivities defined in relation to the past? The book examines the role of the 'tragic hero' narrative as a figurative structure through which the Japanese people could interpret the events of World War II and defeat, offering spectators an avenue of exculpation from a foreign-imposed sense of guilt. Also considered is the fantasy world of the nagare-mono (drifter) or yakuza film. It is suggested that one of the reasons for the great popularity of these films in the 1960s and 1970s lay in their ability to offer men meanings that could help them understand the contradictions between the reality of their everyday experiences and the ideological construction of masculinity.

    Introduction; Chapter 1 Backgrounds; Chapter 2 The Kamikaze Film and the Politics of the Collective; Chapter 3 Uniformed Politicians: The Enemy Within; Chapter 4 Facts, Fictions and Fantasy; Chapter 5 Conclusions;

    Biography

    Standish, Isolde

    'I hope that her future work will build on the implications of this significant project.' - Monumenta Niponica