Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 No Nukes before Fukushima : Postwar Atomic Cinema and the History of the “Safety Myth”
- 2 Straddling 3/11: The Political Power of Ashes to Honey
- 3 Resistance against the Nuclear Village
- 4 The Power of Interviews
- 5 Learning about Fukushima from the Margins
- 6 The Power of Art in the Post-3/11 World
- Appendix: Interview from “Film Workshop with Director Hamaguchi Ryusuke”
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - Straddling 3/11: The Political Power of Ashes to Honey
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 No Nukes before Fukushima : Postwar Atomic Cinema and the History of the “Safety Myth”
- 2 Straddling 3/11: The Political Power of Ashes to Honey
- 3 Resistance against the Nuclear Village
- 4 The Power of Interviews
- 5 Learning about Fukushima from the Margins
- 6 The Power of Art in the Post-3/11 World
- Appendix: Interview from “Film Workshop with Director Hamaguchi Ryusuke”
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Abstract: Chapter 2 analyzes the works of Kamanaka Hitomi, a filmmaker considered to be a flag-bearer of the anti-nuclear movement. What is common among Kamanaka’s works, including Rokkasho Rhapsody (2006); Ashes to Honey (2010); and the latest film, Little Voices from Fukushima (2015), is her approach of giving voices to those who are invisible in the Japanese mass media, and, aided by those voices, trying to get to the bottom of what is “the truth.” Some condemn her work, calling it “too straightforward” or even “propaganda.” Perhaps because the films are highly critical of nuclear power plants, their reception at film festivals tends to be unfavorable. This chapter challenges the tendency in film criticism and the film industry of “not rocking the boat.”
Keywords: anti-nuclear documentary; independent screening; media activism; glocal subjects; intelligibility
Since March 11, 2011, a great many moving images—from professional images such as TV programs to amateur videos shot with smartphones and uploaded to the Internet—of the multiple disasters of the Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami and the meltdown of the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant have emerged in Japan. These include documentary films by professional filmmakers, narrative films representing the victims’ predicament and despair, endless television reports on the day-by-day damage control measures, and a multitude of videos shot with smartphones and uploaded to social media and YouTube. The moving image was the first medium capable of engaging with post-3/11 Japan. In the aftermath, the Internet and television were awash with stunning live images and sounds, produced with consumer-level digital media tools (DV cameras, cellphones, smartphones, PC editing applications, and YouTube). This was a defining feature of the post-3/11 mediascape, as compared with other catastrophes in earlier decades—e.g., the 1995 Great Hanshin Earthquake or the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster—that predated the popularization of affordable and portable personal digital media technologies.
How did portable personal digital media help shape the post-3/11 image? I will address this question by analyzing Ashes to Honey (Mitsubachi no haoto to chikyu no kaiten, 2010, Kamanaka Hitomi) in terms of both its documentary form and its distribution. The quality and attributes of documentary films have changed over the last ten years.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Japanese Filmmakers in the Wake of FukushimaPerspectives on Nuclear Disasters, pp. 61 - 82Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2023