HUSCAP logo Hokkaido Univ. logo

Hokkaido University Collection of Scholarly and Academic Papers >
Graduate School of International Media, Communication and Tourism Studies / Research Faculty of Media and Communication >
国際広報メディア・観光学ジャーナル = The Journal of International Media, Communication, and Tourism Studies >
No.32 >

石内都『ひろしま』における原爆記憶の語り : 「痕跡」に投影されるまなざしと行為

Files in This Item:
06_zhang.pdf1.27 MBPDFView/Open
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:http://hdl.handle.net/2115/82417

Title: 石内都『ひろしま』における原爆記憶の語り : 「痕跡」に投影されるまなざしと行為
Other Titles: Memories of Atomic Bombings as Narrated in Ishiuchi Miyako's Photography Hiroshima series : Gaze and Actions toward ‘Trace’
Authors: 張, 欣慧1 Browse this author
Authors(alt): Zhang,Xinhui1
Issue Date: 22-Apr-2021
Publisher: 北海道大学大学院国際広報メディア・観光学院
Journal Title: 国際広報メディア・観光学ジャーナル
Journal Title(alt): The Journal of International Media, Communication, and Tourism Studies
Volume: 32
Start Page: 61
End Page: 79
Abstract: There are so many approaches putting in the representations of the memory of Japan's Atomic Bombings. Among them are artworks, which present a possibility of growing wider meaning of traces as not only the resulting index of past. This study focuses on one well-known photographer Ishiuchi Miyako, who deals with traces related to the Atomic Bombing in Hiroshima as her lifework. By conducting a content analysis on her works, this study aims to clarify what kind of traces she captures, and how those traces are gazed through the memory telling by means of artistic expression, which may finally influence how we perceive and memorize its traumatic history in the past. To answer these questions, this paper overviews her oeuvre to confirm the themes of her photographs, then center upon her ongoing series Hiroshima with the theory of visual culture and photography. The analysis shows that the traces she captures are not only the clothing of the victims killed by the atomic bombing, but include the specific horizons of time embedded in those personal items which she called ‘kime’, as well as the natural lighting on the light-sensitive film. In contrast to the reflection on the consequences of a specific past, observations of this paper indicate that the traces here bring a more universal value, which associated with the foundation of a place of remembering and memorizing, in where viewers may immerse in the present and being guided beyond the tragedy of Hiroshima.
Type: bulletin (article)
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2115/82417
Appears in Collections:国際広報メディア・観光学ジャーナル = The Journal of International Media, Communication, and Tourism Studies > No.32

Submitter: 張 欣慧

Export metadata:

OAI-PMH ( junii2 , jpcoar_1.0 )

MathJax is now OFF:


 

 - Hokkaido University