Producing Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Literature, Film, and Transnational Politics
de Yuko Shibata
Moyenne des votes :
0 | vote | ![]() |
0 | vote | ![]() |
0 | vote | ![]() |
0 | vote | ![]() |
Votre vote : -
Description de l'ouvrage:
National, disciplinary, and linguistic boundaries all play a role in academic study and nowhere is this more apparent than in traditional humanities scholarship surrounding the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. How would our understanding of this seminal event change if we read Japanese and Euro-American texts together and across disciplines? In Producing Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Yuko Shibata juxtaposes literary and cinematic texts usually considered separately to highlight the "connected divides" in the production of knowledge on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, shedding new light on both texts and contexts in the process.
Shibata takes up two canonical works--American journalist John Hersey's account, Hiroshima, and French director Alain Resnais' avant-garde film, Hiroshima Mon Amour--that are traditionally excluded from study in Japanese literature and cinema. By examining Hersey's Hiroshima in conjunction with The Bells of Nagasaki (Nagai Takashi) and Children of the A-Bomb (Osada Arata), both Japanese bestsellers, Shibata demonstrates how influential Hersey's Hiroshima has been in forging the normative narrative of the hibakusha experience in Japan. She also compares Hiroshima Mon Amour with Kamei Fumio's documentary, Still It's Good to Live, whose footage Resnais borrowed to depict atomic bomb victimhood. Resnais' avant-garde masterpiece, she contends, is the palimpsest of Kamei's surrealist documentary; both blur the binaries between realist and avant-garde representations. Reading Hiroshima Mon Amour in its historical context enables Shibata to offer an entirely new analysis of Renais' work. She also delineates how Japanese films came to produce the martyrdom narrative of the hibakusha in the early postwar period.
Producing Hiroshima and Nagasaki allows us to trace the complex and entangled political threads that link representations of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, reminding us that narratives and images deploy different effects in different places and times. This highly original approach establishes a new kind of transnational and transpacific studies on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and raises the possibility of a comparative area studies to match the age of world literature.
À propos de l'auteur :
Yuko Shibata is a research fellow at the International Peace Research Institute at Meiji Gakuin University.
Voir le site internet de l'éditeur University of Hawaii Press
> Sur un thème proche :
Projections of War (1999)
Hollywood, American Culture, and World War II, revised and updated edition
Sujet : Sociology
Hollywood and the Military Bureaucracy (2021)
Depicting America's Fighting Forces at Their Best and Worst
de Bob Herzberg
Mediating War and Identity (2020)
Figures of Transgression in 20th- and 21st-century War Representation
Dir. Lisa Purse et Ute Wölfel
Down Syndrome Culture (2024)
Life Writing, Documentary, and Fiction Film in Iberian and Latin American Contexts
Sujet : Sociology
Filming the First (2024)
Cinematic Portrayals of Freedom of the Press
de Helen J. Knowles-Gardner, Bruce E. Altschuler et Brandon T. Metroka
Sujet : Sociology