یادداشتهای مربوط به کتابنامه ، واژه نامه و نمایه های داخل اثر
متن يادداشت
Includes bibliographical references (pages 367-372) and index.
یادداشتهای مربوط به مندرجات
متن يادداشت
Foreword: outside views of the Japanese film / Donald Richie -- Introduction / Carole Cavanaugh and Dennis Washburn -- The word before the image: criticism, the screenplay, and the regulation of meaning in prewar Japanese film culture / Aaron Gerow -- The cinematic art of Higuchi Ichiyô's Takekurabe (Comparing Heights, 1895-1896) / Janet A. Walker -- Once more and Gosho's romanticism in the early occupation period / Arthur Nolletti, Jr.-- The taunt of the gods: reflections on Woman in the dunes / Linda C. Ehrlich and Antonio Santos -- Adapting The Makioka sisters / Kathe Geist -- In the show house of modernity: exhaustive listing in Itami Jûzô's Tanpopo / Charles Shirô Inouye -- Where's mama? The sobbing Yakuza of Hasegawa Shin / Alan Tansman -- Saving the children: films by the most "casual" of directors, Shimizu Hiroshi / Keiko I. McDonald -- Ishihara Yûjirô: youth, celebrity, and the male body in late-1950s Japan / Michael Raine -- Otoko wa tsurai yo: nostalgia or parodic realism? / Richard Torrance -- A working ideology for Hiroshima: Imamura Shôhei's Black rain / Carole Cavanaugh -- Piss and run: or how Ozu does a number on SCAP / Edward Fowler -- In the realm of the censors: cultural boundaries and the poetics of the forbidden / Leger Grindon -- The arrest of time: the mythic transgressions of Vengeance is mine / Dennis Washburn -- The frenzy of metamorphosis: the body in Japanese pornographic animation / Susan J. Napier.
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متن يادداشت
"Word and Image in Japanese Cinema examines the complex relationship between the temporal order of linguistic narrative and the spatiality of visual spectacle, a dynamic that has played an important role in much of Japanese film. The tension between the controlling order of words and the liberating fragmentation of images has been an important force that has shaped modern culture in Japan and that has also determined the evolution of its cinema. In exploring the rift between word and image, the essays in this volume clarify the cultural imperatives that Japanese cinema reflects, as well as the ways in which the dialectic of word and image has informed the understanding the critical reception of Japanese cinema in the West."--Jacket.