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Ukiyo ad

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... scandal sheets, served as commercial messages, as fashion shows, and lampoons. ... TV ads embellish and draw viewers into the world of celebrity ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ukiyo ad


1
Ukiyo - ad
  • Some thoughts toward a theory of representation,
    social structuration and cultural values

2
Todd Joseph Miles Holden
  • Professor, Mediated Sociology
  • Department of Multi-Cultural Societies
  • Graduate School of International Cultural Studies
  • Tohoku University
  • Sendai, Japan

3
Japanese Media and Identity
Much of my work to date has involved the
intersection between media and identity (in Japan)
4
Japanese Media and Identity
5
Mediated Identity Defined
  • (1) Interactions
  • In and through institutions
  •  
  • (2) And involving significations
  • (3)  conveyed through representations of
  • sameness
  • difference
  • (4) by media
  • (5) And brought into relief by
  • users references to
  • Socially-constructed group traits
  • Their depiction of relationships
    between/amongst
  • Themselves
  • Their group
  • and/or other groups

6
Previous Research on Mediated Identity
  • Adentity the filtration of messages about
    self, group, individuality, freedom (and
    contraint) through TV advertising.
  • Welcome to my Homepage sampling of Japanese
    home pages in focused areas revealed evidence of
    rather unified selves, intentionally constructed
    for an unknown public to consume.
  • Adolechnics how young cell phone users employ
    communication technology to frame, enhance
    self-presentation, and better understand
    themselves.
  • Sportsports daily news reports about Japanese
    athletic performance overseas has the effect of
    creating hyper-awareness of national and cultural
    identity.
  • The Overcooked and Underdone the various ways
    that masculinities (and femininities) are
    mediated in Japanese TV food shows

7
Todays Discussion
  • Looks at 2 media or, better, two forms of
    expression
  • Ukiyo-e
  • Advertising
  • And their interrelationship
  • Ontologically beyond media I want to think
    about what it means that historically
    continuities can be seen in cultural values and
    practices, as played out in different epochs,
    through very different media.

8
Todays Discussion
  • Because this particular session addresses
    communication, identity and values, I wish to
    think about matters of form and content.
  • Specifically, what are the relationships between
    these twin communication forms and Japanese
    cultural ideas.
  • Where I would like this discussion to move is
    toward matters of societal nature
  • And also, to some degree, questions of values and
    identity

9
Todays Discussion
  • In the process, we will talk about the following
    key media practices
  • Representation
  • Intimacy
  • Uchi/Soto
  • Mass-mediated bindingness
  • Persistence of core cultural values

10
Todays Discussion
  • As for specific content bearing on cultural
    values, we shall consider
  • Privileged Space
  • Class
  • Social Organization/Order
  • Celebrity
  • Nature
  • Sexuality

11
To Begin
  • About Contemporary Media
  • TV
  • Advertising
  • About Ukiyo-e

12
The Centrality of Television in Japan Today
  • In Japan today, there are 6 TVs for every 10
    people
  • and a diffusion rate of 100.
  • TV is viewed by virtually every Japanese every
    day 95 of the population.
  • This has been the case since the 1960s when the
    rate was also 95.
  • This far exceeds other popular forms of
    information processing newspapers (86),
    cellphones (73), and the Internet (27).

13
The Centrality of Television in Japan Today
  • A 1990s NHK study found that, on average, at
    least one TV set played 7 to 8 hours a day in
    each Japanese dwelling.
  • Another study found that TV viewing is deemed as
    indispensable by 43 of the population.

14
The Centrality of Television in Japan Today
  • Today, the average for personal viewing per day
    approaches 225 minutes, and has constantly topped
    three hours since 1960.
  • A recent European survey places the number in
    excess of four hours, ranking Japan third in the
    world.
  • 261 minutes, this ranks ahead of the U.S. (at 255
    minutes) and behind Mexico (265) and Bosnia
    (287). In the most recent assessment, Japan came
    in second only to Bosnia.

15
The Centrality of TV Advertising in Japan Today
  • Japans advertising market is the second largest
    worldwide
  • Some Facts/Figures
  • Advertising outlays for TV outdistance all other
    media sources
  • At 34.1
  • Its closest alternative conduit is newspapers (at
    19.9).
  • It amounts to 223,250,000 just for television
  • Dedicated to 957,447 ads
  • Consuming 6,016 broadcasting hours per year
  • Source Dentsu Koukoku Nenkan, 02 03 Dentsu
    Advertising Yearbook, 2002 2003, Tokyo
    Dentsu, 2002 pp.57,90,89.

16
The Centrality of TV Advertising in Japan Today
  • Advertising serves not only a major motor for
    Japanese television it also works as one of the
    major means by which cultural communication
    occurs.
  • Ads serve a powerful socializing and ideological
    function, narrowly and repetitiously re/producing
    images of gender, cultural values, history,
    nationalism, and political, social and personal
    identity (among others).
  • On advertising and gender, see Holden 2000
  • On advertising and cultural reproduction, see
    Holden 2001
  • On advertising and nationalism, see Holden 2002

17
Ukiyo-Ad
Advertisements as Strips
  • Japanese ads often adopt the form of panels.
  • Ukiyo-e paintings of the 17th and 18th century
    serve as their cultural precursor
  • Like ukiyo-e, ukiyo-ads are fully realized (or
    else pieces of fully-realized) worlds.
  • They are arbitrary slice(s) or cut(s) from the
    stream of ongoing activity. (Goffman 197410).
    Video still-lifes, if you will.

18
The Reality of Strips
  • Ukiyo-ads often stand as enclaves of invented
    reality which, nonetheless, are based on and
    transmitted into the real world as their own
    reality

The constant communication of their values and
practices works to re/produce society in accord
with that worldview
19
An Example Cosmetics
20
The Scenario
A woman enters a bar alone Shes wearing a
clinging, shiny red dress A young man in a white
shirt is behind the bar The woman sits alone at
the bar, caressing the stem of her glass
21
The Scenario (continued)
She raises her eyes suddenly to meet the
mans and winks Shocked, the man drops the
glass hes holding As it shatters the womans
lips part Entranced, the man reaches out to to
touch the woman
22
The Scenario (continued)
  • She meets his touch
  • Then directs his fingers to her face

23
The Scenario (concluded)
  • She regards herself in the mirror of her compact
  • We see her embrace the man forcefully

In a voice-over the man utters "is it okay to
touch your skin?"
24
Some Media Theory Bindingness
  • In recent work (Holden 2004, Holden and Ergul,
    forthcoming) I argue that TV in Japan is a
    binding mechanism.
  • TV is one of only a few institutions and set of
    fixed activities with a finite set of codes,
    languages, customs and meanings that are shared
    (at least interpretable) by the entire society
    and engaged in routinely, in a narrow, consistent
    set of ways.

25
Some Media Theory
  • Moreover, despite a variety of genres, the
    communication tropes, constantly recycled
    personae, and relatively narrow range of content
    work to draw the viewer into an intimate web of
    proximity and common cultural currency.
  • One effect is to create a near-national uchi
  • A privileged space
  • Offering familial-like membership
  • A direct link between the viewers world and the
    invented, hidden, non-existent world of
    celebrities
  • An ontological configuration predicated on
    in-group secrets whose currency is automatic,
    unconditional warmth one which daily produces an
    ongoing collective history.

26
About Ukiyo-e
27
Ukiyo-e a precis
  • As most of you probably know, ukiyo-e refers to
    the floating world.
  • Generally, this referred to
  • Transience and pleasure
  • Likely because ukiyo-e came of age during the Edo
    period
  • a time during which a rising merchant class began
    to emphasize (and subsidize) worldly pleasures
  • they frequented the so-called pleasure-quarters
    and patronized theaters.
  • These two sources became the early subject matter
    for woodblock prints

28
Explaining Ukiyo-e Structurally
  • There are 2 key dimensions to ukiyo-es inception
    and proliferation.
  • Production
  • Factors associated with its development and
    distribution.
  • Consumption
  • Factors associated with its maintenance and use.

29
Explaining Ukiyo-e Production
  • The early woodblock prints were generally
    commissioned by the Kabuki and Noh-Theaters and
    by actors as a form of advertising.

30
Marrying Media Kabuki and Ukiyo-e
  • Ukiyo-e artists produced theater posters and
    playbills.
  • These prints, which depicted famous actors,
    helped promote and then preserve the aragoto
    style of acting.

Source http//www.vmfa.state.va.us/ukiyoe/ukiyoe1
.html
31
Wedding Commercialized Culture and Communication
  • Ukiyo-e prints were created for a mass-market,
    and their publishers dominated the creative
    process. As such
  • publishers determined the subject matter
  • commissioned artists
  • oversaw the creation of the woodblocks, and
  • marketed the finished products.
  • To heighten public demand, publishers developed
    series of prints which they sold in installments.
  • Source http//www.vmfa.state.va.us/ukiyoe/ukiyoe1
    .html

32
Explaining Ukiyo-e Consumption
  • At ukiyo-es inception there was a fixed social
    hierarchy
  • Warriors, farmers, and artisans stood above
    merchants, who were the wealthiest segment of the
    population
  • Having their political power effectively removed
    by the shogun rulers, the merchant class turned
    to art and culture as arenas in which they could
    participate on an equal basis with the elite
    upper classes.
  • Source http//www.loc.gov/exhibits/ukiyo-e/objec
    t.html

33
Explaining Ukiyo-e Consumption
  • Ukiyo-e provided not only the merchants, but
    those in the city and in less traditional
    professions a chance to participate in society.
  • This offered a means of attaining cultural status
    outside the sanctioned realms of shogunate,
    temple, and court.
  • Source http//www.loc.gov/exhibits/ukiyo-e/objec
    t.html
  • The key actors in this consumption process
    included actors, artists, townspeople, and
    publishers.

34
Ukiyo-e Art High or Low?
  • At its inception, Ukiyo-e was not considered a
    fine art, rather it was a commercial art.

35
Communicative Arts and Cultural Continuity
  • This distinction between High-Low / Fine versus
    Commercial art merits comment.
  • As Buruma recently observed, even court
    painters of the Kano School made little
    distinction between decorative and fine art.
    (NYR, June 23, 200514)
  • The same could be said in other (and all)
    cultural realms in Japanese cultural
    communications where a tendency to separate high
    from low was not strictly adhered to even prior
    to Modernism.
  • Certainly, such melding is characteristic both of
    ukiyo-e and advertising.

36
Cultural Continuities
  • There are some aspects of ukiyo-e and
    contemporary advertising that warrant special
    note. Both possess
  • Production-consumption systems
  • Promotional dimensions in their communication
  • Referencing of cultural, political, social and
    moral aspects of the surrounding society
  • Melding of high and low forms of communication
  • Requirements for extremely advanced (popular)
    cultural literacy by their audiences in decoding
    texts

37
Societal System, Commercialized Culture, and
Communication
  • The fact that ukiyo-e possesses socio-economic
    dynamics similar to the contemporary scene is
    significant.
  • The presence of a promotional system (an
    agency/promoter), celebrities, mixed in with
    depictions of everyday life, and the
    commercialized process of advertising these
    elements publicly leads to the spanning/melding
    of societal sectors.
  • It also produces societal bindingness between
    message producer, medium, content/consumed
    object, and message consumer.

38
The Historical Continuities of Communication/Cultu
re
  • This historical continuity in media/system
    matters because I believe it suggests a
    seamlessness between (Japanese) culture and forms
    of communication.
  • As such, not only modes of communication, but the
    content of communication persist, helping to
    unify a culture across time.
  • Despite political, economic, ideological and
    technological changes, much of what came before
    is found in the present what was found in a
    prior (and very different) medium continues into
    the current moment.

39
Ukiyo-e as New Media
  • Katsuhiko Takahashi (1992) has argued that rather
    than a form of art, ukiyo-e was akin to modern
    mass media, with the functions of information,
    advertisement and play.
  • See Edo no nyu media (The New Media of Edo)
  • Viewing ukiyo-e as a fine art is limiting insofar
    as it ignores the functional value of ukiyo-e
    during its time.

40
Ukiyo-e as New Media
  • An aesthetic and class-based theory is implicated
    in this, but Takahashis examples are most
    salient.
  • The author observes that ukiyo-e reported on
    games, depicted scenes from scandal sheets,
    served as commercial messages, as fashion shows,
    and lampoons.
  • In some ways this makes it closest to the wide
    show
  • It also bears strong resemblance to TV
    advertising

41
How to Read Ukiyo-e
  • Takahashi concludes in a way similar to
    semioticists who work with advertising or
    cultural studies researchers who assess media
    texts
  • ukiyo-e prints should be viewed as objects for
    social anthropological analysis rather than art
    history.
  • This is similar, then, to work conducted by, say
    Goffman (1968) concerning gender in North
    American magazine advertising and Holden (2000)
    in Japanese TV advertising.

42
Static Media?
  • One issue of concern to media theorists but
    possibly less so to those engaged in Japanese
    Studies is whether media are static, discrete
    entities.
  • Are they individual in their ontological
    characteristics, their operative aspects, and
    their effects
  • Or do they share similar ontologies, operations,
    and effects

43
A Theory of Mixed Media?
  • Media Studies tends to distinguish between media
    forms
  • TV differs from radio, comics are different than
    the Internet
  • But is it possible that media are melded?
  • Do they share readability
  • Is the way one encodes messages the same as the
    way other media encode?
  • So, too, is the manner in which one medium is
    decoded by its audience the same as the way in
    which another is decoded?

44
A Theory of Mixed Media?
  • On this account
  • ukiyo-e might bear considerable relationship to
    comics (manga)
  • So, too, would it be related to advertising
    either in its tropes of representation, or its
    specific content.
  • One might claim historical continuity in both
    form and content (across media).

45
Ultimately Ontological Similarity, Analogic
Breakdown?
  • Ukiyo-e and TV advertising share extensive
    similarities. Above all
  • Their polysemy
  • Focus on celebrity
  • Attention to everyday life
  • Enabling surveillance of privileged, unnavigable
    worlds
  • De-centered dissemination of knowledge and
    information
  • Reproduction of popular culture

46
Distinct Media
  • Ultimately, though, we are talking about media
    with different feel, approach and perspective.

47
Distinct Media
  • Despite similar themes or subjects, these are not
    identical means of communication
  • Moreover, the political, economic and cultural
    systems from which they emerged and within which
    they operate(d) differ.

48
Ultimately Ontological Similarity, Analogic
Breakdown?
  • Above all, some key differences emerge
  • Different communication strategies
  • TV ads embellish and draw viewers into the world
    of celebrity
  • They help forge more intimate links with
    personalities in society who are inserted into
    viewers lives through other genre (and media),
    at other times.
  • Thus, ads provide greater genre-spanning
  • Ads also manifest a greater bindingness function

49
Deeper Ontologies
  • As you may recall, I have somewhat whimsically,
    perhaps foolishly grandiosely, sub-titled this
    talk some thoughts toward a theory of
    representation, social structuration, and
    cultural values.
  • The theory I have in mind is about communication
    and cultural continuity despite quite radical
    societal change.
  • This is what I will now address in the second
    half of this talk.

50
Deeper Ontologies I Representation
  • Let me begin with Representation.
  • It can be thought of in terms of any number of
    elements. Among the most salient may be
  • Medium
  • Subject
  • Perspective
  • Modes of address
  • Aim
  • Tropes

51
Deeper Ontologies I Representation
  • Today, in the interest of time, I will only look
    at a few similarities and differences between the
    media
  • Working toward understanding ways that they
    articulated with the larger culture and society.
  • First, I will consider Medium
  • In what way(s) was ukiyo-e a different kind of
    medium
  • In what way(s) can ukiyo-e be thought of as a
    medium that is similar to or different than
    advertising
  • Next I will focus on Perspective
  • In terms of modes of address, juxtaposition of
    images, and the construction of a set out of
    serial scenes
  • Although this involves Tropes this analysis will
    not delve into that microscopic medium comparison

52
Japanese Painting as Medium A quick history of
forms
  • Numerous media have been employed in Japanese
    painting over the centuries. These include
  • emakimono (Horizontal scrolls)
  • Created by pasting single sheets together to form
    a long roll.
  • Images were viewed from right to left
  • Among the oldest forms of Japanese painting
  • kakemono (Vertical scrolls)
  • Mounted on a wall
  • Has a roller on both ends
  • The top roller has a string attached to enable
    vertical hanging
  • The bottom roller serves to straighten the image
    due to its weight
  • Became popular during the Edo era
  • Comes closest to the Western framed canvas
    painting
  • byobu (Folding screens)
  • Came from China to Japan in the 7th century
  • Because of size, use was limited to temples and
    palaces
  • As merchant class grew, so did the demand for
    byobu in rich towns
  • The subjects were similar to those on ukiyo-e
  • fusuma (Sliding doors)

53
Ukiyo-e as Medium
  • Thus Ukiyo-e represented a departure from its
    national precursors.
  • It was in some ways closer to European approaches
    to the presentation of art than earlier Japanese
    models.
  • Its mass-produced nature served to bring it
    closer to lithographic print or even
    later-evolving media such as records, movies, and
    television.

54
Woodblock Prints as Media
  • The Woodblock Print of Ukiyo-e were iterated
    media if not mass, then multiple-produced
    media.
  • Unlike paintings, ukiyo-e prints could be
    produced rapidly, inexpensively and in large
    numbers,
  • The production of a print involved an artist, a
    printing shop and a publisher.
  • After a publisher's approval was secured, an
    artist's drawing went to a printing shop where a
    copyist traced it onto transparent paper.

55
The Media Culture Link
  • In this way, ukiyo-e were very responsive to
    daily life and culture.
  • Here we see connections between media in
    particular ukiyo-e and advertising.
  • Herein also lies a link between representation
    and cultural values/practices.

56
Representation
  • In terms of how it communicated, ukiyo-e employed
    certain approaches to subject and perspective
    that reveal both similarities and differences to
    contemporary advertising.

57
Tropes of Representation 1 Serial and Set.
Views of a Subject
  • Two of the most famous ukiyo-e artists,
    Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) and Ando Hiroshige
    (1797-1858), produced famous series of portraits
    revolving around the singular object, Mount Fuji.

58
Serial and Set Hiroshige
59
Serial and Set Hokusai
60
Serial and Set Advertising
  • In advertising, the fact that multiple scenes can
    be embedded in one communication can be exploited
    to create a serial/set effect.
  • The result is often conveying a variety of
    perspectives, opening into discourse about
    various themes no different than ukiyo-e

61
Serial and Set Advertising
  • Here, a Pretz campaign employs the SMAP star,
    Goro, who engages in a succession of shared
    snacks/near-kisses with women and young girls

62
Serial and Set Advertising
  • Ranging in race, age, and attractiveness

63
Serial and Set Advertising
  • In the process, the ad builds discourse about
    topics such as monogamy

64
Serial and Set Advertising
  • Ethnic and/or international union

65
Serial and Set Advertising
  • Culture, Occupation, Class

66
Serial and Set Advertising
  • Pedophilia

67
Serial and Set Advertising
  • And identity

if not homosexuality
68
Tropes of Representation II Shifting Perspective
  • What ukiyo-e was less adept at handling (that ads
    can) is changes in perspective. While the former
    is rather uni-dimensional, the latter is more
    able to change viewpoints, as in the following
    example

69
Deeper Ontologies II Structuration
  • Social Structuration can be thought of in terms
    of elements such as
  • Class
  • Group
  • Gender
  • Economy
  • Polity
  • Institutions (such as family, religion, military,
    entertainment)

70
Deeper Ontologies II Structuration
  • Social Structuration in all these dimensions are
    present in both ukiyo-e and advertising

71
Deeper Ontologies II Social Organization/Structu
ration
  • Ukiyo-e perhaps unintentionally, via the simple
    representation of what was out there,
    effectively conveyed social configuration/order.
  • Ads, of course, can do the same, but given the
    democratization of the public lifespace and the
    aim not to disenfranchise consumption
    communities, may do so less often.

72
Deeper Ontologies II Class/Structuration
  • The ukiyo-e of Edo, in particular was rife with
    images of samurai, as well as nobility, geisha
    and entertainers.
  • All belonged to specific classes or orders in
    Japan of that tie.

73
Deeper Ontologies II Class/Structuration
  • Advertising, as well, is capable of capturing
    social grades from salaried workers, to
    celebrities who move in higher society, to people
    with money enough to engage in leisure pursuits.

74
Deeper Ontologies II Group/Structuration
  • Just as ukiyo-e depicted relations among people
    of like characteristics, ads often develop
    portraits of those within social groups.

75
Deeper Ontologies II Group/Structuration
  • So, too, do ads represent relations or accent
    differences between different groups.
  • Something found less often in ukiyo-e.

76
Deeper Ontologies II Gender/Structuration
  • Ukiyo-e generally depicted women indoors
    occasionally they were engaged in domestic labor.
  • Ads may be more extensive in the roles they
    allocate for women, but very often they are also
    indoors and performing domestic labor.

77
Deeper Ontologies II Economic/Structuration
  • Ukiyo-e was also effective at revealing the
    contours of the economic organization of Japan at
    that time.

78
Deeper Ontologies II Economic/Structuration
  • TV ads do the same revealing the contours of the
    economic organization of Japan today.

79
Deeper Ontologies II Institution/Structuration
  • Ukiyo-e occasionally represented institutions
    like religion, the military or family.

80
Deeper Ontologies II Institution/Structuration
  • For ads, it is more often the family, the
    corporation, and (increasingly) the
    celebrity/cultural entertainment system that
    receive attention.

81
Deeper Ontologies III Cultural Values
  • Cultural values can be thought of in terms of
    ideas and practices embedded in these
    communications, such as
  • Nature
  • Sexuality/eroticism
  • Groupism
  • Consumption
  • Celebrity
  • Cultural Identity

82
Deeper Ontologies IIICultural values concerning
Nature
  • Both ukiyo-e and ads focus on nature as a theme

83
Deeper Ontologies IIICultural values concerning
Nature
  • Both ukiyo-e and ads focus on nature as a theme

both as central focus
84
Deeper Ontologies IIICultural values concerning
Nature
  • as well as feeling-inducing background

85
Deeper Ontologies IIICultural values concerning
Sexuality/Eroticism
  • This is a theme that continually appears in both
    media

86
Deeper Ontologies IIICultural values concerning
Sexuality/Eroticism
  • A continuity that is meaningful in ways that help
    us see deep historical threads transcending media
    differences.

87
Deeper Ontologies IIICultural values concerning
Sexuality/Eroticism
  • Although ads are more chaste and tend to
    highlight female sexuality and same sex contact
    (as opposed to overt sexual acts).

88
Deeper Ontologies IIICultural values concerning
Consumption
  • While ukiyo-e did include images of consumption,
    this was not a central focus.

89
Deeper Ontologies IIICultural values concerning
Consumption
  • Ads, of course, aim to stimulate consumption and
    so that is often what is depicted.
  • Surprisingly, as I have shown in other work
    (Holden 1999) concerning product-least
    advertising, ads often de-emphasize or ignore
    consuming goods.

90
Deeper Ontologies III Cultural values
concerning Celebrity
  • We have already considered how the aim of
    advertising Kabuki, Noh and their actors served
    as a major spur in the development of ukiyo-e.

91
Deeper Ontologies III Cultural values
concerning Celebrity
  • It could be argued that the celebrity culture so
    pervasive in Japan today can be traced back to
    the Kabuki/Noh promotional culture of Edo.

92
Deeper Ontologies III Cultural values
concerning Celebrity
  • Certainly, by today, the link between
    celebrity-star and advertising is firmly
    established.

93
Deeper Ontologies III Cultural values
concerning Cultural Identity
  • Identity is a theme that courses through
    contemporary advertising it touches on self,
    class, gender, cultural, and national identity,
    among others.

94
Deeper Ontologies III Cultural values
concerning Cultural Identity
  • Ukiyo-e, as a more privileged or targeted form of
    communication may have done this less, though
    identity discourse is present

95
Deeper Ontologies IVMedia and Surveillance
  • Ukiyo-e, in its heyday, was about the
    representation of (if not the invitation into)
    private, privileged space.
  • There was a furtive, surveilling element

96
Deeper Ontologies IVMedia and Surveillance
  • This space was not accessible by all
  • Though via consumption of the medium, there was
    an ability to gain access

97
Deeper Ontologies IVMedia and Surveillance
Ads work in the same way, treating us to stolen
glimpses inside
98
Deeper Ontologies IVMedia and Surveillance
The worlds of domestic athletes living and
playing in foreign lands
99
Deeper Ontologies IVMedia and Surveillance
Work Inside Corporations
100
Deeper Ontologies IVMedia and
SurveillanceFamily Life
101
Media Divergence
While we have spent much of this talk thinking
about similarities between media, there are
important ways in which they diverge. One is
their presence in contemporary culture
102
Ukiyo-e Today
  • The style persists today

But often associated with erotica, divested of
the other cultural and social elements that
ukiyo-e was noted for.
103
Ukiyo-e Today
In some cases, the cultural and social elements
for which ukiyo-e was noted are still featured
above all, nature, performers and human
subjects.., although often in more grotesque or
aberrant ways.
104
Advertising The Truer Ukiyo-e of Today
  • However, both in terms of quantity (ubiquity) and
    quality (themes covered) advertising comes closer
    to filling this social role today.
  • It treats all the themes once at the heart of
    ukiyo-e
  • i.e. privileged space, celebrity, social order,
    nature, and consumption

105
Media Divergence
Beyond this advertising performs communication
functions, such as education cultural
reproduction, but also historical reinvention
elements not exploited as much by ukiyo-e.
106
Intimacy and Uchi
  • The claim that is harder to show in the context
    of this talk is the one that I pursue in my
    research on TV.
  • Looking at Wideshows, Cooking Shows, News, Quiz,
    Dating and Reality shows, one see that way that
    uchi or an inclusive grouping is created via such
    media.
  • Advertising plays a decided role by creating an
    invented, shared space, often invoking many of
    the same human figures and themes that exist out
    in the real world, as well as on the daily news
    and entertainment programs on TV.

107
Ukiyo-ad, Intimacy and Uchi
  • In some ways this takes us away from ukiyo-e, but
    in other ways it doesnt.
  • For here, what we encounter is privileged,
    bracketed, inclusive but private space.
  • Viewer-consumers are invited as spies, but are
    also made complicit in their participation.
  • Ukiyo-ad is the medium that secures this social
    configuration and creates a national community.

108
Conclusion Getting through So What?
  • If it was only about similarity in the style or
    modes of representation, that would be nothing
    more than a curiosity
  • To some it would also seem less than profound as
    we are talking about shared forms of expression
    in a society that possesses historical continuity.

109
Conclusion Getting through So What?
  • However, if it is about identical themes
    reproduced in two different forms of
    communication, separated by one to two hundred
    years of cultural development, then that actually
    stands as a fact of significance.

110
Conclusion Getting through So What?
  • Suddenly what we are talking about is
  • Less FORM of expression than CONTENT being
    expressed
  • Not simply framed activity, not only carefully
    staged scenes
  • Social organization, practices and values which,
    despite major political, economic and cultural
    changes over the years, still bear great
    similarity.

111
Conclusions
  • As a form of communication, ukiyo-e barely
    persists today (or at least not with the impact
    and cultural position it once had)
  • But as a means of concretizing Japan its social
    structure, cultural practices and values it
    stands as a vital communication precursor to the
    way we represent and interpret the world around
    us today.

112
Finally
  • A bit troubling is what this means for other
    theorization I have formulated concerning
    globalization (Holden 2003).
  • There, I advance a notion of distinct careers
    that nations evince based on set of factors such
    as their resource and ethnic mix, political and
    economic institutions, and the like.

113
Finally
  • In light of todays paper, one must ask What
    does it mean if a nation like Japan has an
    exogenous profile based on temporal diversity a
    set of genotypically distinct careers but an
    endogenous profile based on continuity of
    cultural values?
  • Is this a problem of ontology or of epistemology?
  • But I will leave the adjudication of that dispute
    for another day.

114
Thank You for your attention
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