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Japonisme and the birth of cinema / Daisuke Miyao.

By: Miyao, Daisuke [author.].
Material type: TextText Language of document:EnglishPublisher: 2020Description: xi, 210 p. ; 24 cm.ISBN: 9781478008538; 9781478009429.Subject(s): Lumi�ere, Auguste, 1862-1954 | Lumi�ere, Louis, 1864-1948 | Motion pictures, French -- Japan -- History | Motion pictures -- France -- History -- 19th century | Motion pictures -- Japan -- History -- 19th century | Japonism -- France | Orientalism -- France | Art, Modern -- Japanese influences | Art and motion pictures -- France | Culture in motion picturesDDC classification: 791.430944052 M6994 Ja
Contents:
The a travers cinema : Japonisme and the Lumiere brothers' films -- Japonisme and nativized Orientalism : the Lumiere brothers' "Japanese films" -- Japonisme and internalized Orientalism : cinematographer Shibata Tsunekichi and the birth of cinema in Japan -- Epilogue. Japonisme and the birth of a female star in Hollywood and in Japan.
Summary: "JAPONISME AND THE BIRTH OF CINEMA explores the influence and impact of traditional Japanese art on the development of early cinematic visual style, particularly with regards to the actuality films created by the French brothers Auguste and Louis Lumiere between 1895 and 1905. Japonisme, a term coined in 1872, has historically been used to broadly describe Japanese influence on French art; in this book, film and media scholar Daisuke Miyao argues that Japonisme goes beyond French imitations of Japanese art to describe the actual application of Japanese principles, methods, and aesthetics in the production of French art. Examining the nearly 1,500 films made by the Lumiere brothers, Miyao argues that far from being insignificant films that sought to capture everyday life, these short films provided a space for experimenting with aesthetic and cinematic styles imported from Japan. Furthermore, Miyao analyzes a set of Lumi�ere films produced in Japan, and investigates how these films document a negotiation between French Orientalism and Japanese aesthetics. What emerges for Miyao is thus a refutation of Japonisme as merely Orientalism: whereas Orientalism implies a one-directional gaze from West to East that transformed the "Orient" into a static, ahistorical, entity, Miyao argues that Japonisme entailed a multipronged, in-depth engagement with the methods, principles, aesthetic sensibilities, and techniques of Japanese artists that ultimately constituted a two-way conversation between East and West. Chapter 1 argues for a reframing of the Lumi�ere films as part of a media ecology of photography, painting, and cinema influenced by Japanese compositional and aesthetic styles. In chapter 2, Miyao focuses on the thirty-three Lumi�ere films produced in Japan, and how the Orientalism of the films was contested by the incorporation of the ukiyo-e-style and engagement with Japanese people. Chapter 3 attends to Japanese reactions to Japonisme through the medium of Japanese filmmaking at the end of the 19th century. This book will be of interest to students and scholars of film and media studies, media archaeology, art history, aesthetics, East Asian studies, and French studies"-- Provided by publisher.
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791.430944052 M6994 Ja (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 270910

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The a travers cinema : Japonisme and the Lumiere brothers' films -- Japonisme and nativized Orientalism : the Lumiere brothers' "Japanese films" -- Japonisme and internalized Orientalism : cinematographer Shibata Tsunekichi and the birth of cinema in Japan -- Epilogue. Japonisme and the birth of a female star in Hollywood and in Japan.

"JAPONISME AND THE BIRTH OF CINEMA explores the influence and impact of traditional Japanese art on the development of early cinematic visual style, particularly with regards to the actuality films created by the French brothers Auguste and Louis Lumiere between 1895 and 1905. Japonisme, a term coined in 1872, has historically been used to broadly describe Japanese influence on French art; in this book, film and media scholar Daisuke Miyao argues that Japonisme goes beyond French imitations of Japanese art to describe the actual application of Japanese principles, methods, and aesthetics in the production of French art. Examining the nearly 1,500 films made by the Lumiere brothers, Miyao argues that far from being insignificant films that sought to capture everyday life, these short films provided a space for experimenting with aesthetic and cinematic styles imported from Japan. Furthermore, Miyao analyzes a set of Lumi�ere films produced in Japan, and investigates how these films document a negotiation between French Orientalism and Japanese aesthetics. What emerges for Miyao is thus a refutation of Japonisme as merely Orientalism: whereas Orientalism implies a one-directional gaze from West to East that transformed the "Orient" into a static, ahistorical, entity, Miyao argues that Japonisme entailed a multipronged, in-depth engagement with the methods, principles, aesthetic sensibilities, and techniques of Japanese artists that ultimately constituted a two-way conversation between East and West. Chapter 1 argues for a reframing of the Lumi�ere films as part of a media ecology of photography, painting, and cinema influenced by Japanese compositional and aesthetic styles. In chapter 2, Miyao focuses on the thirty-three Lumi�ere films produced in Japan, and how the Orientalism of the films was contested by the incorporation of the ukiyo-e-style and engagement with Japanese people. Chapter 3 attends to Japanese reactions to Japonisme through the medium of Japanese filmmaking at the end of the 19th century. This book will be of interest to students and scholars of film and media studies, media archaeology, art history, aesthetics, East Asian studies, and French studies"-- Provided by publisher.

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