ARTiculate
https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/articulate
<p><em>ARTiculate</em> is a peer-reviewed graduate student journal of art history and visual studies published by the University of Victoria. The publication aims to further the establishment of a graduate art historical community by offering graduate students the ability to disseminate their knowledge and engage in an editorial process that is shaped by the insights of peers well-versed in their chosen area of study. In keeping with the inclusive conception of art that is embraced within a global art history, <em>ARTiculate</em> does not privilege a singular culture or medium in its selection of manuscripts. Rather, the publication serves to circulate highly original submissions that are valued for their contributions to the preexisting scholarly conversation.</p>University of Victoriaen-USARTiculate1927-9701<p>Authors grant <em>ARTiculate</em> first right to publication of their work. Authors retain copyright.</p> <p>Contributing authors do so under the agreement that they release their essays under the <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported</a> licence. Under the Open Access policy of the journal, this licence allows anyone to use or share the author’s work, on the condition that they provide proper attribution.</p> <p>Authors may enter into separate, non-exclusive publication agreements for the same work provided a note is included indicating that the essay was first published in <em>ARTiculate Art History</em>.</p>Erin Morton: "Unsettling Canadian Art History."
https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/articulate/article/view/Unsettlingcanadianarthistory
Jessica Ziakin-Cook
Copyright (c) 2024 UniversityofVictoria
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0
2024-07-232024-07-2351610.18357/art522037Commingled Art and Commingled Culture
https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/articulate/article/view/commingledartandcommingledmedia
<p><span data-contrast="none">From 1896, when the first Kinetoscope was brought to Japan, to the early 1920s, all film screenings were accompanied by a live Japanese narrator called the </span><em><span data-contrast="none">benshi</span></em><span data-contrast="none">.</span><em><span data-contrast="none">Benshi</span></em><span data-contrast="none"> stood to the left of the film screen and—speaking in melodious rhythms—provided narration, character impersonation, explanation of western exotica, and offered general commentary and critique for the then silent films.</span><span data-contrast="none"> In late ninteenth-century Japan, film was not seen as an autonomous medium but rather as "commingled” media, comprised of vocal storytelling and projected motion pictures.</span><span data-contrast="none"> This was in part due to long-standing Japanese theatrical traditions such as temple and itinerant </span><em><span data-contrast="none">etoki</span></em><span data-contrast="none">, the Japanese Buddhist practice in which monks use picture scrolls to expound Buddhist principles. </span><em><span data-contrast="none">Benshi</span></em><span data-contrast="none"> performers drew upon such theatrical heritage to describe the foreign film apparatus, thereby fragmenting the filmic system of representation and instilling a distinct culture of critical independence in Japanese silent film audiences.</span></p> <p><span data-contrast="none">This essay contributes to scholarly debates regarding “commingled” media, the juxtaposition of heterogeneous media, which is reflective of unique Japanese artistic culture.</span><span data-contrast="none"> It provides a case study of </span><em><span data-contrast="none">Benshi </span></em><span data-contrast="none">Tokugawa Musei’s performance of the 1920 silent film </span><em><span data-contrast="none">The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari </span></em><span data-contrast="none">(Robert Wiene)</span> <span data-contrast="none">recorded at the Kinokuniya Hall in Tokyo in 1968.</span><span data-contrast="none">7</span><span data-contrast="none"> This remaining work by Tokugawa Musei, a renowned </span><em><span data-contrast="none">benshi</span></em><span data-contrast="none"> of the silent film era, offers insight into interactions between the </span><em><span data-contrast="none">benshi</span></em><span data-contrast="none"> and silent film as it relates to Japanese traditions of “commingled” media. </span><span data-ccp-props="{"201341983":0,"335559731":720,"335559740":480}"> </span></p>Miranda Carroll
Copyright (c) 2024 Miranda Carroll
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0
2024-12-072024-12-07573410.18357/art522207