Podcast Episode

Reflections on the division between the sacred and the secular in contemporary Japan: The case of life-cycle rituals

[Recorded 11th March 2015] Following their defeat of Japan in the second World War the occupying American forces imposed radical policies of suffrage, demilitarisation and wide ranging social reforms. Part of the allied policies included strict censorship on what could be shown in cinemas. This lead to the wide scale importation of Hollywood cinema into a country where until recently it had not only been banned but audiences had been fed a strict diet of anti-american propaganda. In light of the developing field of audience research and memory studies in Japanese cinema this seminar will look at primary research with surviving women to see how in watching Hollywood cinema and phrasing their own experiences through those of popular films and Hollywood stars, women were able to make sense of their own pasts. This seminar took place at Oxford Brookes University on 11 March 2015.


Authors

Melinda Papp, Japanese Department, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest

Website

https://www.brookes.ac.uk/social-sciences/research/ejrc/

Published

2015-03-16

Details

  • Owner: Thomas Shepherd
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