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Multi-dimensional Viewing from a Longitudinal Perspective: Review of a Study on Japanese Samurai Films by Liya Luo
DOI: https://doi.org/10.62381/P243220
Author(s)
Yunfei Liu
Affiliation(s)
Chongqing University of Post and Telecommunications, Chongqing, China
Abstract
Samurai films, as the most distinctive film genre of Japan, hold a paramount position not only in the history of Japanese cinema, but also in the global cinematic landscape. Therefore, they deserve significant attention and thorough research. However, until now, most domestic academic studies on Japanese samurai films have been fragmented and lacking systematic analysis. Luo Liya's “A Study of Japanese Samurai Films” is the first scholarly monograph published in China that systematically examines these films. It comprehensively employs critical methodologies such as social and historical criticism, structuralism-semiotic criticism, and cultural criticism. This paper provides a panoramic exploration and an extensive discussion on various aspects of samurai films including their developmental trajectory, stage characteristics, directorial lineage, genre construction, aesthetic style, cultural connotations, and dramatic origins. With its broad research perspective combined with historical theories integration, this work stands as an academic masterpiece that exhibits both documentary rigor and scholarly rationality.
Keywords
“A Study of Japanese Samurai Films”; Japanese Films; Multi-dimensional Perspectives; Vertical and Horizontal Viewing
References
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