Hibakusha cinema as means of rediscovering identity

Datum obhajoby
2019-09-20
Fakulta
Akademie múzických umění v Praze.Filmová a televizní fakulta
Katedra
FAMU International
Typ práce
Diplomová práce
Podnázev
The study focuses on the analysis of rediscovering identity by Japanese society through Japanese films created after Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings.
Abstrakt
The thesis explores the topic of Hibakusha cinema which developed after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during WW II. The study focuses on rediscovering identity by Japanese society after the nuclear explosions. The aim of the analysis of hibakusha films directed by the generation of filmmakers who survived the war will aim to present how Japanese rediscovered and redefined their identity as a nation after the bombings. Filmmakers were chosen on the basis of their first-hand experience and insight into the Japanese condition before and then after the war. Thesis refers to Junichiro Tanizaki’s essay on Japanese aesthetics In Praise of Shadows. His examination of the society sheds new and interesting light on the Japanese outlook on the world and art. This thesis focuses also on the work of Akira Lippit Atomic Light (Shadow Optics). The publication provides the analysis of the atomic light as a new concept for interpreting the meaning of light, especially the cinematic light. Apart from a general overview of the Japanese history and culture thesis focuses on in-depth analysis of the content and form of movies of Akiro Kurosawa, Kaneto Shindo, Shinsei Adachi, and Hiroshi Teshigahara.
Popis
Klíčová slova
japonská kinematografie, filmová teorie, válka a společnost, svržení atomové bomby na Hirošimu a Nagasaki (1945 : Japonsko), analýzy filmových děl, Japonsko