Dialectics without Synthesis
Japanese Film Theory and Realism in a Global Frame

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Yamamoto, Naoki (Author)
published: University of California Press 2020
Media Type: Book, E-Book

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further information
Physical Description: 248; 14 b-w illustrations; 150 x 227 x 15
ISBN: 9780520351806
Subjects:
Collection: PDA Print VUB
Table of Contents

Dialectics without Synthesis explores Japan’s active but previously unrecognized participation in the global circulation of film theory during the first half of the twentieth century. Examining a variety of Japanese theorists working in the fields of film, literature, avant-garde art, Marxism, and philosophy, Naoki Yamamoto offers a new approach to cinematic realism as culturally conditioned articulations of the shifting relationship of film to the experience of modernity. In this study, long-held oppositions between realism and modernism, universalism and particularism, and most notably, the West and the non-West are challenged through a radical reconfiguration of the geopolitics of knowledge production and consumption.

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Realism, Film Theory, Japanese Cinema
1. Naturalism and the Modernization of Japanese Cinema
2. The Machine Aesthetic and Proletarian Realism
3. Literary Adaptation and Textual Realism
4. Documentary Film and Epistemological Realism
5. Neglected Traditions of Bergsonism and Phenomenology
Epilogue: Hanada Kiyoteru and Postwar Debates
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index