Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

The Ephemeral as Transcultural Aesthetic: a Contextualization of the Early Films of Ozu Yasujiro

Standish, Isolde

Authors

Isolde Standish



Abstract

This paper argues that through the privileging functions of camera lenses both fragmenting and highlighting, and through the formal processes of camera movement and editing, cinema is the material manifestation of an aesthetics of the ephemeral of modernity par excellence, being characterized by the time-space separation of modernity, and the accompanying reflexive ‘ordering and reordering’ of knowledge. Therefore, following Anthony Giddens’ sociological understanding of the ‘consequences of modernity’, this paper seeks to theorize the emergent technology of cinema, the techniques of its use, and the resultant aesthetic of the ‘ephemeral’ at the historical juncture when it was exported from the US and Europe to the non-western world with particular reference to Japan and the serious shōshimingeki (lower middle-classes) films directed by Ozu Yasujirō in the mid-1930s.

Citation

Standish, I. (2012). The Ephemeral as Transcultural Aesthetic: a Contextualization of the Early Films of Ozu Yasujiro. Journal of Japanese and Korean Cinema, 4(1), 3-14. https://doi.org/10.1386/jjkc.4.1.3_1

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Nov 5, 2012
Deposit Date Nov 20, 2012
Journal Journal of Japanese and Korean Cinema
Print ISSN 1756-4905
Electronic ISSN 1756-4913
Publisher Taylor and Francis Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 4
Issue 1
Pages 3-14
DOI https://doi.org/10.1386/jjkc.4.1.3_1


Downloadable Citations