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Accepted Paper:
Paper short abstract:
This paper examines the aesthetic of urban noise in 1930s Gendai-geki sound films. Cinematic urban noise was an expression of 'modan raifu', at once national and transnational, whereby contextual matters of political, economic, societal, and foremost technological nature shaped these sounds.
Paper long abstract:
This paper critically examines the cinematic portrayal of urban noise (e.g. traffic noise, crowd noise in public spaces, harbor sounds, machine noise, residential noise) in 1930s Gendai-geki films. Noise was an abundant part of the modernization process – a product of early film sound technology, but also that of industrialization, mechanical innovation, and urban, everyday life. In Japan, the nationalistic strengthening of modern technological, sociological, and economic developments during the 1920s and 1930s were at the center of attention: as Mariam Silverberg observes, the modernization process of Japan was not a mere American imitation, but an intrinsic development on the observation of “modan raifu (modern life)” in the Japanese metropolitan city (1). This intrinsic modernization process was also partly expressed in early sound films, which were, as Johan Nordström puts it, an "urban phenomenon" (2). The frequent production, distribution, and exhibition of sound films in Japan came relatively late compared to Europe and America. This was not due to a lack of innovation or technology, but because of, as Hiroshi Komatsu argues, economic turbulences, societal life, technological norms and exhibitive traditions such as the use of the benshi (3). The Japanese sound film was emblematic of the tension between transnational traits and national particularities, whereby its acoustic aesthetics became the expression of such modern contemplations. The paper thus argues, by the example of the Gendai-geki genre (e.g. Kenji Mizoguchi’s Naniwa erejî, 1936), that urban noise in early Japanese sound films was an expression of Japanese modernities and the political, economic, societal and foremost technological nature of the respective decade.
Footnotes
(1) Miriam Silverberg, “Constructing the Japanese Ethnography of Modernity,” in The Journal of Asian Studies (Vol 51, No. 1, 1992), 33.
(2) Johan Nordström, “Sound and Intermediality in 1930s Japanese Cinema,” in The Japanese Cinema Book, eds., Alastair Phillips, Hideaki Fujiki (London: The British Film Institute, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2020), 152.
(3) Hiroshi Komatsu, “The Foundation of Modernism: Japanese Cinema in the Year 1927,” in Film History (Vol 17, No. 2/3, 2005), 364-375.
Silence, noise, and radio: Japanese sound studies
Session 1 Friday 18 August, 2023, -