In this Book

Making Icons: Repetition and the Female Image in Japanese Cinema, 1945–1964

Book
Jennifer Coates
2017
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summary
One distinctive feature of post-war Japanese cinema is the frequent recurrence of imagistic and narrative tropes and formulaic characterizations in female representations. These repetitions are important, Jennifer Coates asserts, because sentiments and behaviours forbidden during the war and post-war social and political changes were often articulated by or through the female image. Moving across major character types, from mothers to daughters, and schoolteachers to streetwalkers, Making Icons studies the role of the media in shaping the attitudes of the general public. Japanese cinema after the defeat is shown to be an important ground where social experiences were explored, reworked, and eventually accepted or rejected by the audience emotionally invested in these repetitive materials. An examination of 600 films produced and distributed between 1945 and 1964, as well as numerous Japanese-language sources, forms the basis of this rigorous study. Making Icons draws on an art-historical iconographic analysis to explain how viewers derive meanings from images during this peak period of film production and attendance in Japan.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title, Title Page, Copyright

Contents

pp. v-vi

List of Illustrations

pp. vii

Acknowledgements

pp. viii-ix

Notes on the Romanization of Japanese Words

pp. x

Introduction

pp. 1-32

1. Post-war Stars and the Japanese Studio System

pp. 33-67

2. The Suffering Mother Trope

pp. 68-89

3. Post-war Housewives and the Tsuma-mono

pp. 90-109

4. Schoolgirls and Bourgeois Daughters

pp. 110-133

5. Women in the Public Sphere

pp. 134-159

6. Theorizing Excess and the Abject

pp. 160-173

7. Bodies of Excess

pp. 174-200

Conclusion

pp. 201-206

Select Filmography

pp. 207-214

Bibliography

pp. 215-227

Index

pp. 228-234
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