Kurosawa: Film Studies and Japanese Cinema

Author:   Mitsuhiro Yoshimoto
Publisher:   Duke University Press
ISBN:  

9780822325192


Pages:   496
Publication Date:   31 March 2000
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Kurosawa: Film Studies and Japanese Cinema


Overview

An exploration of the films of Japanese director, Akira Kurosawa. It addresses the entire body of Kurosawa's work from 1943 to 1993, seeking to shift the ground upon which Japanese cinema has been built and question its dominant interpretative frameworks and critical assumptions. Arguing that Kurosawa's films arouse anxiety in Japanese and western critics because the films problematise Japan's self-image and the West's image of Japan, Mitsuhiro Yoshimoto challenges widely-circulating cliches about the films and shows how these works constitute narrative answers to socio-cultural contradictions and institutional dilemmas. While acknowledging the achievement of Kurosawa as a filmmaker, Yoshimoto uses the director's work to reflect on and rethink a variety of larger issues, from Japanese film history, modern Japanese history, and cultural production to national identity and the global circulation of cultural capital. He examines how Japanese cinema has been ""invented"" in the discipline of film studies for specific ideological purposes and analyzes Kurosawa's role in that process of invention.

Full Product Details

Author:   Mitsuhiro Yoshimoto
Publisher:   Duke University Press
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.748kg
ISBN:  

9780822325192


ISBN 10:   0822325195
Pages:   496
Publication Date:   31 March 2000
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Yoshimoto's Kurosawa is destined to take its place along with the most important achievements of cinema studies, which is to say that it is a book about something more than cinema itself. Yet it offers a stimulating, running commentary on the films that makes one want to see them all over again, while also offering a new theory of auteurship as collective negotiation. This is a grand performance sustained by a voice of rare authority. --Fredric Jameson [*Note: We'll need to run this edit by him.] A tour-de-force reading of Kurosawa's films. Yoshimoto adds greatly to current Kurasawa scholarship and to situating the construct 'Japanese Cinema' in a way that it has not been situated before. --[PERMISSION PENDING] [RR, PP, edited] E. Ann Kaplan, author of Looking for the Other: Feminism and the Imperial Gaze [Yoshimoto's] primary concern, as an academic working in the United States, is with western criticism of Japanese cinema as it moved from humanism to structuralism, to post-structuralism and to postmodernism. His erudite and near-comprehensive book is about what we non-Japanese understand in the work of Kurosawa. He finds much of our understanding tainted because it views Japan and Japanese cinema in an exotic light... Yoshimoto's aim is to build up a detailed case that westerners do not understand Kurosawa. If we think we do, he implies, we are wrong, because we know so little of Japanese culture...He tries to help us by giving a full account of the context in which Kurosawa worked and in which his films were made. It is something of a crash course: cinema, theatre, society, politics, history and so on. His knowledge is encyclopedic and his scholarship impressive. --Mamoun Hassan, Times Higher Education Supplement, December 15 2000


A tour-de-force reading of Kurosawa's films. Yoshimoto adds greatly to current Kurasawa scholarship and to situating the construct 'Japanese Cinema' in a way that it has not been situated before. -E. Ann Kaplan, author of Looking for the Other: Feminism, Film, and the Imperial Gaze Yoshimoto's Kurosawa is destined to take its place along with the most important achievements of cinema studies, which is to say that it is a book about something more than cinema itself. Yet it offers a stimulating, running commentary on the films that makes one want to see them all over again, while also offering a new theory of auteurship as collective negotiation. This is a grand performance sustained by a voice of rare authority. -Fredric Jameson


Yoshimoto's Kurosawa is destined to take its place along with the most important achievements of cinema studies, which is to say that it is a book about something more than cinema itself. Yet it offers a stimulating, running commentary on the films that makes one want to see them all over again, while also offering a new theory of auteurship as collective negotiation. This is a grand performance sustained by a voice of rare authority. --Fredric Jameson [*Note: We'll need to run this edit by him.] A tour-de-force reading of Kurosawa's films. Yoshimoto adds greatly to current Kurasawa scholarship and to situating the construct 'Japanese Cinema' in a way that it has not been situated before. --[PERMISSION PENDING] [RR, PP, edited] E. Ann Kaplan, author of Looking for the Other: Feminism and the Imperial Gaze [Yoshimoto's] primary concern, as an academic working in the United States, is with western criticism of Japanese cinema as it moved from humanism to structuralism, to post-structuralism and to postmodernism. His erudite and near-comprehensive book is about what we non-Japanese understand in the work of Kurosawa. He finds much of our understanding tainted because it views Japan and Japanese cinema in an exotic light... Yoshimoto's aim is to build up a detailed case that westerners do not understand Kurosawa. If we think we do, he implies, we are wrong, because we know so little of Japanese culture...He tries to help us by giving a full account of the context in which Kurosawa worked and in which his films were made. It is something of a crash course: cinema, theatre, society, politics, history and so on. His knowledge is encyclopedic and his scholarship impressive. --Mamoun Hassan, Times Higher Education Supplement, December 15 2000


Author Information

Mitsuhiro Yoshimoto is Associate Professor of Japanese, Cinema, and Comparative Literature at the University of Iowa.

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