Ozu and the Ethics of Indeterminacy

Daisuke Miyao author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Duke University Press

Publishing:31st Mar '26

£23.99

This title is due to be published on 31st March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Ozu and the Ethics of Indeterminacy cover

Ozu and the Ethics of Indeterminacy re-examines cinema studies through the work of Japanese filmmaker Yasujirō Ozu, employing the multiple methodologies and indeterminacy of Ozu’s films as a model for discussions of cinema’s relationship to the world and the formation of film studies as a discipline. Centering a selection of Ozu films in each chapter, Daisuke Miyao builds a method based on the way films directed by Ozu avoid unitary perspective and allow multiple possibilities of standpoint and spectatorial position, which Miyao calls the ethics of indeterminacy. Analyzing Ozu’s use of cinematography, narrative, and color, Miyao theorizes the indeterminate in film—the seen and unseen, human and nonhuman, domestic and international—to initiate a multi-directional dialogue on the study of cinema that reaches beyond auteurism and culturalism to establish a new basis for disciplinary conversations.

“In this highly original and richly illustrated work, Daisuke Miyao examines the work of master filmmaker Yasujiro Ozu from fresh perspectives. Ozu’s use of color and camera movement are discussed more thoroughly than ever before. Miyao reveals how Ozu films emerged from Japanese society as only a critic deeply knowledgeable of both that culture and the international influences of film history could manage.”—Tom Gunning, author of The Attractions of the Moving Image: Essays on History, Theory, and the Avant-Garde

"Daisuke Miyao beautifully reveals how Ozu turns every color choice, every cut, every object and moment of transience into an act of compassion for the spectator. His luminous book captures the quiet humanity inside Ozu's cinema and reminds us that how we look at film - and life - determines how gently we move through it."—Daniel Raim, director of The Ozu Diaries

ISBN: 9781478033325

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 445g

290 pages