Still hear the wound : toward an Asia, politics, and art to come

書誌事項

Still hear the wound : toward an Asia, politics, and art to come

selected essays edited by Lee Chonghwa ; translation edited by Rebecca Jennison & Brett de Bary

(Cornell East Asia series, 181)

East Asia Program, Cornell University, c2015

  • : hardback
  • : pb

タイトル別名

残傷の音

Zanshō no oto : ajia, seiji, aato no mirai e

残傷の音 : 「アジア・政治・アート」の未来へ

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注記

Translation of: 残傷の音 : 「アジア・政治・アート」の未来へ. 東京 : 岩波書店, 2009

DVD-ROM in pocket attached to inside back cover

Includes bibliographical references

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Still Hear the Wound: Towards an Asia, Politics, Art To Come introduces English language readers for the first time to work by an emerging group of critics and artists addressing the legacies of colonial violence in present-day Japan. The volume contains translated essays, and an accompanying DVD with artist interviews selected from Zansho no oto: ajia, seiji, aato no mirai e, published by Iwanami Shoten in 2009. Editor Lee Chonghwa is known for her poetic and philosophical writings dealing with gender and colonial violence, and with the issue of testimony related to the 1948 Jeju Massacre and former "comfort women." The essays collected here grow out of her innovative project, "Asia, Politics, Art" (2006-2008), which attempted to reinflect increasingly fraught discussions over Japan's responsibility for crimes of colonialism so as to include artistic and aesthetic responses to the problem. What new politics, and new modes of political community, might arise from reflecting on the intertwined colonial histories of Korea and Okinawa are questions distinctively posed in this volume. At workshops held at Okinawa's Sakima Art Museum, situated close to Marine Corps Air Station Futenma (part of the U.S. military infrastructure on Okinawa), Lee highlighted the work of younger artists representing ethnic and sexual minorities in Japan. A performance on DVD by artist Ito Tari deals with "comfort women" abandoned on the battlefield by the retreating Japanese army, while an essay by zainichi playwright Choi Jinseok follows the traces of the unmarked graves of Korean forced laborers who perished in Okinawa, Taiwan, and Japan. Work by critics Ikeuchi Yasuko, Sato Izumi, Shinjo Ikuo, Yano Kumiko, and artists Kinjo Mitsuru, Oh Haji, Takahashi Yuji, Soni Kum, and Yamashiro Chikako are included. The DVD, which also contains an "art documentary" of The Battle of Okinawa by Iri and Toshi Maruki, is ideal for classroom use.

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