In this Book
The Cinema of Naruse Mikio: Women and Japanese Modernity
Naruse was a studio-based director, a company man renowned for bringing films in on budget and on time. During his long career, he directed movies in different styles of melodrama while displaying a remarkable continuity of tone. His films were based on a variety of Japanese literary sources and original scripts; almost all of them were set in contemporary Japan. Many were “women’s films.” They had female protagonists, and they depicted women’s passions, disappointments, routines, and living conditions. While neither Naruse or his audiences identified themselves as “feminist,” his films repeatedly foreground, if not challenge, the rigid gender norms of Japanese society. Given the complex historical and critical issues surrounding Naruse’s cinema, a comprehensive study of the director demands an innovative and interdisciplinary approach. Russell draws on the critical reception of Naruse in Japan in addition to the cultural theories of Harry Harootunian, Miriam Hansen, and Walter Benjamin. She shows that Naruse’s movies were key texts of Japanese modernity, both in the ways that they portrayed the changing roles of Japanese women in the public sphere and in their depiction of an urban, industrialized, mass-media-saturated society.
Table of Contents
Cover
Title, Copyright, Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction: The Auteur as Salaryman
1. The Silent Films: Women in the City, 1930â1934
2. Naruse at P.C.L.: Toward a Japanese Classical Cinema, 1935â1937
3. Not a Monumental Cinema: Wartime Vernacular, 1938â1945
4. The Occupation Years: Cinema, Democracy, and Japanese Kitsch, 1945â1952
5. The Japanese Womanâs Film of the 1950s, 1952â1958
6. Naruse in the 1960s: Stranded in Modernity, 1958â1967
Conclusion
Notes
Filmography
Bibliography
Index
| ISBN | 9780822388685 |
|---|---|
| Related ISBN(s) | 9780822342908, 9780822343127 |
| MARC Record | Download |
| OCLC | 1143288743 |
| Pages | 484 |
| Launched on MUSE | 2020-03-07 |
| Language | English |
| Open Access | No |
Copyright
2008


