All That Is Solid Turns into Sand: <i>Woman in the Dunes</i> across Page and Screen

This paper attempts a close study of Abe Kobo’s novel <i>Woman in the Dunes</i> and its screen adaptation (dir. Teshigahara Hiroshi 1964). Engaging adaptation studies, media studies, and sound studies, this paper moves from the conventional focus on the linear transfer of text from a sou...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Xinyi Zhao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-11-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/11/6/144
Description
Summary:This paper attempts a close study of Abe Kobo’s novel <i>Woman in the Dunes</i> and its screen adaptation (dir. Teshigahara Hiroshi 1964). Engaging adaptation studies, media studies, and sound studies, this paper moves from the conventional focus on the linear transfer of text from a source to a result, to examine adaptation as a multilevel, multisensory, and multidirectional process of remediation. By mediating documentary cinema and avant-garde tradition, the filmic adaptation, as the paper argues, not only provokes and enhances its literary original, but also illuminates existentialist concerns that gained critical currency in the 1960s. The paper moves on to analyze Takemitsu Toru’s score in relation to Teshigahara’s surrealist imagery; in doing so, it elucidates the way the film gives the sand a form of human agency alluded to yet not fully realized in Abe’s novel. Scrutiny of Abe and Takemitsu’s early years in Japan-occupied Manchuria further connects Abe’s work to the issue of postcolonial identity while opening <i>Woman in the Dunes</i> to more interpretative possibilities as an I-Novel. Through mediating collective history and personal memory, adaptation opens a dialogic intersubjective horizon where questions of identity and affect intersect in the post-war media environment.
ISSN:2076-0787