ABSTRACT

This book examines representations of the Second World War in postwar Chinese and Japanese cinema. Drawing on a wide range of scholarly disciplines, and analysing a wide range of films, it demonstrates the potential of war movies for understanding contemporary China and Japan. It shows how the war is remembered in both countries, including the demonisation of Japanese soldiers in postwar socialist-era Chinese movies, and the pervasive sense of victimhood in Japanese memories of the war. However, it also shows how some Chinese directors were experimenting with alternatives interpretations of the war from as early as the 1950s, and how, despite the "resurgence of nationalism" in japan since the 1980s, the production of Japanese movies critical of the war has continued.

chapter |14 pages

Film, ethnic minorities, and the Anti-Japanese War

An analysis of The Muslim Detachment and Jin Yuji

chapter |14 pages

The Sino-Japanese War in Ip Man

From miscommunication to poetic combat

chapter |13 pages

War, horror and trauma

Japanese atrocities on Chinese screens

chapter |12 pages

Documentaries as historical text

The emergence of the East River Column on Hong Kong television screens

chapter |14 pages

Establishing the genre of the revisionist war film

The Shin-Tōhō body of post-Occupation war films in Japan

chapter |14 pages

Wild, wild war

Okamoto Kihachi and the politics of the Desperado films

chapter |15 pages

Japan's longest days

Tōhō and the politics of war memory, 1967–1972

chapter |15 pages

The Himeyuri film cycle

Cultural change and remakes of an Okinawan tragedy

chapter |11 pages

What is there to laugh about?

University of Laughs as an anti-war film comedy

chapter |13 pages

A past to be ashamed of or proud of?

Echoes of the Fifteen-Year War in Japanese film