ノダ マナブ
Noda Manabu
野田 学 所属 明治大学 文学部 職種 専任教授 |
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言語種別 | 英語 |
発行・発表の年月 | 2013 |
形態種別 | 書籍掲載論文 |
査読 | 査読あり |
招待論文 | 招待あり |
標題 | Mirrored Image and the Dislocation of Culture in Ninagawa's Shakespeare |
執筆形態 | 単著 |
掲載誌名 | Szekspiromania. Księga dedykowana pamięci Andrzeja Żurowskiego, pod redakcja Anny Cetery |
出版社・発行元 | Warsaw: Warsaw University Press (Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Warszawkiego) |
巻・号・頁 | pp.213-230 |
概要 | Yukio Ninagawa (b. 1935) is the most internationally renowned Japanese theatre director for the productions of Western classics. He has directed numerous Greek tragedies and Shakespeare productions, and has achieved a worldwide stature through a string of international tours, beginning with his Medea (1983) and Macbeth of the "samurai Macbeth" fame (1985). The starting point of my paper is that Ninagawa's Japanization of Shakespeare reflects the cultural dislocation of Japan which took place as a result of its turning to the West as its aspired-to mirror image to model itself on in the process of modernization/westernization. Just as in Lacan's mirror stage, constructing Japan's unified self on a mirror image which is the Other resulted in the disparity and dislocation of its self-image. In Japan today, this cultural dislocation took a form of double remoteness from the West and from its own past. Ninagawa's Shakespeare has been constructed in the political milieu of Japan since the 1960s, and his productions stage the populace as Japan's (alter)ego, as can be seen in his Coriolanus (2006) and exclusively kabuki cast Twelfth Night (2005). |
ISBN | 978-83-235-1074-1 |