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[ecrea] CFP Ozuesque: Ozu and His Influence
Tue Apr 08 09:19:02 GMT 2014
Ozuesque: Ozu and His Influence
Edited by Jinhee Choi (King's College London)
Japanese director Ozu Yasujiro has become a cultural icon whose
influence is now apparent beyond the medium of film: One of the main
characters in the French novel The Elegance of the Hedgehog (Muriel
Barbery, 2009) is appropriately or inappropriately named after Ozu. With
an increasing awareness of Ozu in the cultural as well as cinematic
scenes, the presence of Ozu needs to be revisited within a broader
context than that of Japan. Scholarship on Ozu in film studies has
focused on his film style, which attempts to locate the source of his
unique aesthetics-that is, whether Ozu's distinctive aesthetics may or
may not originate from his Japaneseness.
Ozuesque: Ozu and His Influence, an anthology proposed, reorients the
existing scholarship from Ozu the auteur to the ozuesque-how the
individual sensibility of Ozu can be articulated, and further, how his
aesthetic sensibility has transmitted to and shared by, directors of
successive generations and/or differing nationalities. Films screened at
"Ozu and His Influence," which was part of the Ozu retrospective
organized and hosted by the British Film Institute in 2010, provide a
good starting point. These include the work of directors who are
"inspired" by, and/or pay homage to, Ozu: A Portuguese Goodbye (Joãr
Botelho, 1985), Tokyo-Ga (Wim Wenders, 1985, USA/Germany), Mishima: A
Life of Four Chapters (Paul Schrader, 1986, USA/Japan), Mystery Train
(Jim Jarmusch, 1989, USA), Eat Drink Man Woman (Ang Lee, 1994, Taiwan),
35 Shots of Rum (Claire Denis, 2008, France/Germany), and Still Walking
(Kore-eda Hirokazu, 2008, Japan). To this list one could add Archipelago
(Joanna Hogg, 2010, UK) and Like Someone in Love (Abbas Kiarostami,
2012, France/Japan) that were more recently released.
If sensibility is defined as a disposition that can be shared and
manifest in different historical and cultural contexts, it allows us to
articulate not only Ozu's own distinctive aesthetics, but more
importantly consider the relationship between (or the sensibility shared
by) Ozu and the mentioned directors as operative rather than mimetic.
With the release of Ozu's early and late work on DVDs as of late, which
had not been widely available, this anthology provides an opportunity to
re-examine not only Ozu's sensibility (or sensibilities) across his
oeuvre but also the relationship-both cultural and aesthetic-that is
forged among directors across the world.
Films and topics may include but are not limited to:
-Ozu and modernity
-Ozu and the Hollywood sensibility
-Ozu's early crime films
-Ozu's college comedy
-Ozu and Hasumi
-Ozu and Naruse
-Ozu and the Japanese New Wave
-Ozu and women's rights
-Ozu and the Okinawan popular film movement in the 1980s
-Children in Ozu's (and Kore-eda's) films
-35 Shots of Rum (Claire Denis, 2008, France/Germany)
-The Limits of Control (Jim Jarmusch, 2009, USA/Japan)
-Still Walking (Kore-eda Hirokazu, 2008, Japan)
-Like Father Like Son (Kore-eda Hirokazu, 2013, Japan)
-Archpellago (Joanna Hogg, 2010, UK)
-Café Luimere (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 2003 Japan/Taiwan)
-Like Someone in Love (Abbas Kiarostami, 2012, France/Japan)
A few US-based university presses already expressed interest in the volume.
Please submit an abstract (350 words) and a short bio to the following
email address by Tuesday 15 April.
(jinhee.choi /at/ kcl.ac.uk)
Dr. Jinhee Choi
Senior Lecturer in Film Studies
King's College London
455 Norfolk Building
Strand Campus
London WC2R 2LS
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