Mizoguchi Kenji (1898-1956) always had problems with censors. This presentation analyzes The Naimushō (Ministry of Internal Affairs)’s censorship, 1925-1945, taking Mizoguchi’s Gion no kyodai (Sisters of the Gion, 1936), one of the most critically acclaimed films of the 1930s Japanese cinema, as a case study. Censorship is recast as a process involving criticism, reception, and negotiation. The analysis reconstructs the censors’ logic, goal, and professional consciousness based on their published memos, interviews, the censored script, and the surviving film text.
Chika Kinoshita is a professor of Film Studies at the Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies at Kyoto University. She has published the award-winning book Mizoguchi Kenji: Aesthetics and Politics of the Film Medium (Hosei University Press, 2016), and essays and chapters on cinema, gender, and sexuality in English and Japanese.
This hybrid lecture will be held on site (registration required in advance from here) and via Zoom.
Zoom Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81327602950
Meeting ID: 813 2760 2950