In the early 1940s Japan, cinematographers and critics feverishly discussed the notions of immediacy and authorship in relation to documentary practices. The status of cinematographers as the authors of the images that they shot was particularly questioned in those conversations due to the mechanical nature of the motion picture camera. This article mainly focuses on the discussions in the journal Eiga Gijutsu (Film Technology) in 1941–1942 over the notion of culture, and examines how cinematographers imagined their new roles in documentary practices in the cinema
This dissertation takes an unusual path to trace the visions of postwar Japanese cinema: a popular f...
For many East Asian nations, cinema and Japanese Imperialism arrived within a few years of each othe...
In Photography and Japan, Karen Fraser argues that the diversity of styles, subjects, and functions ...
Writing on Japanese cinema has prioritized aesthetic and cultural difference, and obscured Japan's c...
Zmiany społeczne zachodzące w Japonii pod okupacją amerykańską nie pozostawały bez wpływu na kulturę...
This dissertation examines the role that photography played in re-imaging Japanese cultural identity...
In Japan state controlled active guidance of filmmakers, a central feature of many authoritarian or ...
This dissertation analyzes the cultural, economic, and gendered landscape in which the camera played...
In A New History of Japanese Cinema Isolde Standish focuses on the historical development of Japanes...
In this paper, I explore three cases from postwar Japanese media history where a single topic inspir...
The existing research that addresses the depiction of photojournalists in popular culture focuses pr...
Offers the first ethno-historical study of cinema-going and film viewership in Japan
The remote West Australian town of Broome has a unique photography heritage that sheds new light on ...
Popular convictions as to character of Japanese culture are dominated by the orientalist stereotypes...
This article explores the use of ethnofiction, a technique emerging from the field of visual anthrop...
This dissertation takes an unusual path to trace the visions of postwar Japanese cinema: a popular f...
For many East Asian nations, cinema and Japanese Imperialism arrived within a few years of each othe...
In Photography and Japan, Karen Fraser argues that the diversity of styles, subjects, and functions ...
Writing on Japanese cinema has prioritized aesthetic and cultural difference, and obscured Japan's c...
Zmiany społeczne zachodzące w Japonii pod okupacją amerykańską nie pozostawały bez wpływu na kulturę...
This dissertation examines the role that photography played in re-imaging Japanese cultural identity...
In Japan state controlled active guidance of filmmakers, a central feature of many authoritarian or ...
This dissertation analyzes the cultural, economic, and gendered landscape in which the camera played...
In A New History of Japanese Cinema Isolde Standish focuses on the historical development of Japanes...
In this paper, I explore three cases from postwar Japanese media history where a single topic inspir...
The existing research that addresses the depiction of photojournalists in popular culture focuses pr...
Offers the first ethno-historical study of cinema-going and film viewership in Japan
The remote West Australian town of Broome has a unique photography heritage that sheds new light on ...
Popular convictions as to character of Japanese culture are dominated by the orientalist stereotypes...
This article explores the use of ethnofiction, a technique emerging from the field of visual anthrop...
This dissertation takes an unusual path to trace the visions of postwar Japanese cinema: a popular f...
For many East Asian nations, cinema and Japanese Imperialism arrived within a few years of each othe...
In Photography and Japan, Karen Fraser argues that the diversity of styles, subjects, and functions ...