The Aesthetics of Shadow The Aesthetics of Shadow

The Aesthetics of Shadow

Lighting and Japanese Cinema

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    • 24,99 €

Descrizione dell’editore

In this revealing study, Daisuke Miyao explores “the aesthetics of shadow” in Japanese cinema in the first half of the twentieth century. This term, coined by the production designer Yoshino Nobutaka, refers to the perception that shadows add depth and mystery. Miyao analyzes how this notion became naturalized as the representation of beauty in Japanese films, situating Japanese cinema within transnational film history. He examines the significant roles lighting played in distinguishing the styles of Japanese film from American and European film and the ways that lighting facilitated the formulation of a coherent new Japanese cultural tradition. Miyao discusses the influences of Hollywood and German cinema alongside Japanese Kabuki theater lighting traditions and the emergence of neon commercial lighting during this period. He argues that lighting technology in cinema had been structured by the conflicts of modernity in Japan, including capitalist transitions in the film industry, the articulation of Japanese cultural and national identity, and increased subjectivity for individuals. By focusing on the understudied element of film lighting and treating cinematographers and lighting designers as essential collaborators in moviemaking, Miyao offers a rereading of Japanese film history.

GENERE
Arte e intrattenimento
PUBBLICATO
2013
4 marzo
LINGUA
EN
Inglese
PAGINE
400
EDITORE
Duke University Press
DIMENSIONE
13,2
MB

Altri libri di Daisuke Miyao

Japonisme and the Birth of Cinema Japonisme and the Birth of Cinema
2020
Transnational Cinematography Studies Transnational Cinematography Studies
2016
Sessue Hayakawa Sessue Hayakawa
2007