核灾难和隐形眼镜

IF 0.3 0 FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION
Asian Cinema Pub Date : 2019-10-01 DOI:10.1386/ac_00002_1
M. Yoshimoto
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引用次数: 1

摘要

核灾难的暴力本质上是矛盾的。一方面,当由核武器引起时,它是非常明显的,往往是壮观的。就像暴露在大剂量辐射下一样,这种暴力的后果也可能是瞬间的。另一方面,辐射没有气味,看不见,超出了人类的直接感知。此外,辐射的致命影响往往在多年甚至几十年后逐渐显现出来。这种对人类生命和环境的核暴力既超可见又不可见的悖论,对电影和其他类型的视觉媒体构成了特别的挑战。在这篇文章中,我考察了日本电影长期以来是如何在核问题与视觉文化之间复杂而矛盾的关系中挣扎的。许多日本电影人,包括黑泽明(Kurosawa Akira)等知名导演,以及那些专门从事特效电影(tokusatsu eiga)等流行类型电影的人,都试图克服表现核暴力和放射性污染对环境的不可见性的挑战。我讨论了流行的日本电影如何尝试各种形式和风格的手段,使核暴力的隐形性可察觉或可想象。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nuclear disasters and invisible spectacles
The violence of nuclear catastrophe is fundamentally contradictory. On the one hand, when caused by nuclear weapons, it is highly visible and often spectacular. As is the case with exposure to a large dose of radiation, the consequence of this violence can be instantaneous, too. On the other hand, odourless and invisible, radiation is beyond direct human perception. Furthermore, the deadly effect of radiation often manifests itself gradually over many years or even decades. This paradox of nuclear violence on human lives and the environment, which is simultaneously hypervisible and invisible, poses a particular challenge to film and other types of visual media. In this article, I examine how Japanese cinema has long been struggling with the complex and contradictory relationship between the nuclear question and visual culture. Many Japanese filmmakers, including well-known auteurs like Kurosawa Akira and those who specialize in popular genre movies such as tokusatsu eiga (‘special effects movies’), have tried to overcome the challenge of representing the invisibility of nuclear violence and radioactive contamination of the environment. I discuss how popular Japanese cinema has experimented with various formal and stylistic means to make the invisibility of nuclear violence perceptible or imaginable.
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来源期刊
Asian Cinema
Asian Cinema FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
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