The first book in English dedicated to the actor and director Tanaka KinuyoPraised as amongst the greatest actors in the history of Japanese cinema, Tanaka's career spanned the industrial development of cinema from silent to sound, monochrome to colour. Alongside featuring in films by Ozu, Mizoguchi, Naruse and Kurosawa, Tanaka was also the only Japanese woman filmmaker between 1953 and 1962, and her films tackled distinctly feminine topics such as prostitution and breast cancer. Her career overlapped with a transformative period in Japanese history, and this close analysis of her fascinating life and work offers new perspectives, subjectivities and modes of analysis for the classical era of Japanese cinema.Key FeaturesA unique look at the life and career of Tanaka Kinuyo, as both an actor and directorOffers a new perspective on the history of women and film in JapanBrings together a range of Japanese and western scholars
Rezensionen / Stimmen
It would appear that English language scholarship on Kinuyo Tanaka is just beginning. In addition, this volume is helpful in better understanding some of the outside forces that also played a part in the history of Japanese cinema. -- Peter Nellhaus * Coffee, Coffee and more Coffee * This collection offers long-overdue attention to Japanese actress/director Tanaka Kinuyo (1909-77)...Taken together, these essays offer praise for a woman-already highly successful as an actress-who claimed her own authorship as a director and continued to grow as an actress as she aged...As someone who refused to be pigeonholed, and who took considerable chances, she blazed a strong trail for others to follow. -- LINDA EHRLICH * FILM QUARTERLY * This collection provides a valuable overview of Tanaka Kinuyo's long and prolific career as an actress and director. While Tanaka took on the roles of some of the most iconic figures in Japanese cinema, she also embodied many of the deep contradictions around women's status in a rapidly changing society. These authors brilliantly demonstrate how Tanaka overcame multiple challenges to direct her own powerful films about men and women in the unfixed landscape of postwar Japan. -- Professor Catherine Russell, Concordia University, Montreal
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Sprache
Verlagsort
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 236 mm
Breite: 554 mm
Dicke: 20 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-4744-0969-8 (9781474409698)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Irene Gonzalez-Lopez is a Post-Doctoral Researcher in the Visual and Material Culture Research Centre at Kingston University (London). Michael Smith was awarded his PhD from University of Leeds in 2013.
Preface; Furukawa KaoruIntroduction: Onna Monogatari; Irene Gonzalez-Lopez and Michael Smith 1. Dancer, Doctor, Virgin, Wife: Tanaka Kinuyo's Early Star Image; Lauri Kitsnik 2. Meetings and Partings: How Tanaka's Films End; Alexander Jacoby 3. Tanaka and Mizoguchi: Politics and Rebellion in the Early Postwar Era; Michael Smith 4. The First Female Gaze at Postwar Japanese Women: Tanaka Kinuyo Film Director; Irene Gonzalez-Lopez and Ashida Mayu 5. Kinuyo and Sumie: When Women Write and Direct; Ayako Saito6. Female Authorship, Subjectiviy and Colonial Memory in Tanaka Kinuyo's The Wandering Princess (1960); Alejandra Armendariz-Hernandez 7. Panpan Girls, Lesbians and Postwar Women's Communitites: Girls of Dark (1961) as Women's Cinema; Yuka Kanno