Mick Broderick (ed.)Hibakusha Cinema
Hiroshima, Nagasaki and the Nuclear Image in Japanese Film
Herausgeber: Broderick, Mick
Mick Broderick is author of Nuclear Movies (1991), is completing a PhD in apocalyptic narrative and currently works for the Australian Film Commission in Sydney, Australia. He has published widely on nuclear themes in film, and was invited by Physicians for Social Responsibility to co-curate The Atomic Age in Film Series, a retrospective of nuclear cinema screened in Los Angeles throughout 1995.
Introduction
Broderick Mick; Chapter 1 'Mono no aware': Hiroshima in Film
Richie Donald; Chapter 2 The Imagination of Disaster
Sontag Susan; Chapter 3 Godzilla and the Japanese Nightmare: When Them! is U.S.
Noriega Chon A; Chapter 4 Emperor Tomato-Ketchup: Cartoon Properties From Japan
Crawford Ben; Chapter 5 Akira and the Postnuclear Sublime
Freiberg Freda; Chapter 6 Depiction of the Atomic Bombings in Japanese Cinema During the U.S. Occupation Period
Hirano Kyoko; Chapter 7 The Body at the Center - The Effects of the Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Norms Abé Mark; Chapter 8 The Extremes of Innocence: Kurosawa's Dreams and Rhapsodies
Ehrlich Linda C; Chapter 9 Akira Kurosawa and the Atomic Age
Goodwin James; Chapter 10 Narrative Strategies of Understatement in Black Rain as a Novel and a Film
Dorsey John T.
Matsuoka Naomi; Chapter 11 'Death and the Maiden': Female Hibakusha as Cultural Heroines
and the Politics of A-bomb Memory
Todeschini Maya Morioka;