Shadowing Shakespeare Akira Kurosawa's Kagemusha (1980) and William Shakespeare's English History Plays (c. 1591-98)

被引:0
|
作者
Watson, Alex [1 ]
机构
[1] Meiji Univ, Sch Arts & Letters, Tokyo, Japan
关键词
double; English history plays; medieval warfare; modern nation-state; samurai films;
D O I
10.3167/cs.2021.330106
中图分类号
I0 [文学理论];
学科分类号
0501 ; 050101 ;
摘要
In his 1980 film Kagemusha or Shadow Warrior, Akira Kurosawa presents the sixteenth-century Takeda clan engaging a lower-class thief to impersonate their recently deceased leader, Takeda Shingen. I examine Kagemusha as a critical engagement with Shakespeare's English history plays and 'shadow' counterpart to Kurosawa's trilogy of Shakespeare adaptations, Throne of Blood (1957), The Bad Sleep Well (1960) and Ran (1985). In keeping with Shakespeare's dramatisation of English history, Kurosawa creatively reworks historical sources, incorporating stories of intergenerational rivalry and fulfilled prophecies, to depict the transition from medieval civil conflict to the early-modern nation-state. Kurosawa also deploys the motif of the double to explore the distinctively Shakespearean theme of power as performance, engaging in a dramatic examination of Machiavelli's ideas about politics. I argue that Kurosawa's use of the double posits a theory of influence, drawing on Japanese cultural traditions, in which doubling can achieve a form of transcendence through self-annihilation.
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页码:72 / 84
页数:13
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