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[Commlist] new book: Through a Nuclear Lens: France, Japan, and Cinema from Hiroshima to Fukushima
Wed May 01 15:09:28 GMT 2024
Hannah Holtzman is delighted to announce the publication of the book
Through a Nuclear Lens: France, Japan, and Cinema from Hiroshima to
Fukushima (SUNY Press), which examines the increasingly reciprocal
nature of Franco-Japanese cultural exchange through films that center on
nuclear issues.
For more information:
https://sunypress.edu/Books/T/Through-a-Nuclear-Lens
https://www.amazon.com/Through-Nuclear-Lens-Hiroshima-Fukushima/dp/1438497849/
+/+/+
Description
The Franco-Japanese coproduction Hiroshima mon amour (1959) is one of
the most important films for global art cinema and for the French New
Wave. In Through a Nuclear Lens, Hannah Holtzman examines this film and
the transnational cycle it has inspired, as well as its legacy after the
2011 nuclear disaster at Fukushima Daiichi. In a study that includes
formal and theoretical analysis, archival research, and interviews,
Holtzman shows the emergence of a new kind of nuclear film, one that
attends to the everyday effects of nuclear disaster and its impact on
our experience of space and time. The focus on Franco-Japanese exchange
in cinema since the postwar period reveals a reorientation of the
primarily aesthetic preoccupations in the tradition of Japonisme to
center around technological and environmental concerns. The book
demonstrates how French filmmakers, ever since Hiroshima mon amour, have
looked to Japan in part to better understand nuclear uncertainty in France.
Hannah Holtzman is Assistant Professor of Film and Media Studies in the
Faculty of Liberal Arts at Sophia University in Tokyo.
Reviews
"Through a Nuclear Lens connects the fields of French film studies
with energy humanities, a rapidly emerging field committed to
understanding and exploring how our dependence on oil and nuclear energy
shapes societies and affects subjectivities and human narratives.
Holtzman posits cinema's capacity to function as a critical dialogic
site, where different cultural anxieties and otherwise nationally
understood subjectivities can encounter one another, and where the
boundaries between canonical contributions and lesser-known works
disappear." — Audrey Evrard, Fordham University
"The title of this well-written and expertly organized book
suggests only part of the critical and historical richness it has on
offer. Holtzman masters a host of interconnected cultural issues to
provide a deeply nuanced portrait of the nuclear age that usefully
de-centers the Anglo-American experience." — R. Barton Palmer, editor,
Quarterly Review of Film and Video
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