Tokyo Cyberpunk ppaall--bbrroowwnn22--0000ffmm..iinndddd ii 66//99//1100 1122::1177 PPMM This page intentionally left blank Tokyo Cyberpunk Posthumanism in Japanese Visual Culture Steven T. Brown ppaall--bbrroowwnn22--0000ffmm..iinndddd iiiiii 66//99//1100 1122::1177 PPMM tokyo cyberpunk Copyright © Steven T. Brown, 2010. All rights reserved. First published in 2010 by PALGRAVE MACMILLAN® in the United States—a division of St. Martin’s Press LLC, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010. Where this book is distributed in the UK, Europe, and the rest of the world, this is by Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited, registered in England, company number 785998, of Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS. PALGRAVE MACMILLAN is the global academic imprint of the above companies and has companies and representatives throughout the world. Palgrave® and Macmillan® are registered trademarks in the United States, the United Kingdom, Europe and other countries. ISBN (hardcover): 978-0-230-10359-7 ISBN (paperback): 978-0-230-10360-3 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Brown, Steven T. Tokyo cyberpunk : posthumanism in Japanese visual culture / Steven T. Brown. p. cm. ISBN 978-0-230-10360-3 (alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-230-10359-7 (alk. paper) 1. Animated films—Japan—History and criticism. 2. Science fiction films—Japan— History and criticism. 3. Cyberpunk culture—Japan. 4. Literature and technology— Japan. 5. Comic books, strips, etc.—Japan—History and criticism. I. Title. NC1766.J3 BPN 700.952'090511—dc22 2009046776 A catalogue record of the book is available from the British Library. Design by Scribe Inc. First edition: August 2010 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Printed in the United States of America. ppaall--bbrroowwnn22--0000ffmm..iinndddd iivv 66//99//1100 1122::1177 PPMM Contents List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgments ix Introduction: Posthumanism after AKIRA 1 Reading Rhizomatically 3 Machinic Desires, Desiring Machines, and Consensual Hallucinations 10 Part I: Machinic Desires: Hans Bellmer’s Dolls and the Technological Uncanny in Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence 13 An Overview of Innocence 14 “Once their strings are cut, they easily crumble” 23 From Puppets to Automata 29 The Uncanny Mansion 32 The Dolls of Hans Bellmer 36 Bellmer/Oshii 44 On the Innocence of Dolls, Angels, and Becoming-Animal 50 Part II: Desiring Machines: Biomechanoid Eros and Other Techno-Fetishes in Tetsuo: The Iron Man and Its Precursors 55 The Birth of Sexy Robots 56 After Metropolis, Before Tetsuo: Un chien andalou 60 Giger’s Biomechanoids, Erotomechanics, and Metal Fetishists 64 The “Regular-Size” Monsters of Matango 71 Mutating from the Inside Out: The Fly 72 “Long Live the New Flesh”: Videodrome 79 The Tentacle Motif from Hokusai to Tetsuo 93 Envisioning the Machine-City after Blade Runner 99 Confrontations with the Salaryman Model: Resisting Hegemonic Masculinity and State-Sponsored Capitalism 105 Coda: Co-opting Tetsuo in Tetsuo II: Body Hammer 109 ppaall--bbrroowwnn22--0000ffmm..iinndddd vv 66//99//1100 1122::1177 PPMM vi CONTENTS Part III: Consensual Hallucinations and the Phantoms of Electronic Presence in Kairo and Avalon 111 Letting In Ghosts, Shutting Out the Sun 113 Into the Mise en Abyme: Spectral Flows and the Forbidden Room 120 The Human Stain: Suicide in the Shadow of Hiroshima 127 Avalon and “Borderline Cinema” 132 The Society of the Spectacle 137 The Surrealism of (Virtually) Everyday Life 140 “Welcome to Class Real” 143 Conclusion: Software in a Body: Critical Posthumanism and Serial Experiments Lain 157 A Shōjo Named Lain 161 E-mail from the Dead 162 Doppelgängers in Cyberspace 167 Desiring Disembodiment 176 The Question of Resistance 181 Notes 187 Bibliography 229 Index 247 ppaall--bbrroowwnn22--0000ffmm..iinndddd vvii 66//99//1100 1122::1177 PPMM Illustrations Figure I.1 As the Colonel stares in disbelief, Tetsuo emerges rhizomatically from a tangle of cords and technological debris in a constant state of becoming (AKIRA) 4 Figure 1.1 A tea-serving karakuri ningyō encountered in Kim’s mansion (Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence) 32 Figure 1.2 Kim’s mechanical body, which is reminiscent of the life-sized butai karakuri designed for Takeda Ōmi’s theater (Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence) 33 Figure 1.3 The assembly of a ball-jointed gynoid (Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence) 44 Figure 1.4 The doubling of the gynoid’s body (Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence) 45 Figure 1.5 A gynoid attempting to commit suicide (Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence) 47 Figure 1.6 Batou holds a copy of Hans Bellmer’s The Doll (Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence) 48 Figure 2.1 The multiplied male gaze of the audience focusing on robot Maria’s erotic dance, as reimagined by Freder (Metropolis) 57 Figure 2.2 The salaryman’s erotomechanical girlfriend in Tetsuo 69 Figure 2.3 Seth Brundle discovers an enlarged fly hair growing out of his cheek while shaving (The Fly) 76 Figure 2.4 The salaryman discovers a metal whisker sticking out of his cheek in a scene that pays homage to The Fly (Tetsuo) 77 Figure 2.5 Max fondles his television’s erogenous zones (Videodrome) 83 Figure 2.6 The tentacle motif in Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within 95 Figure 2.7 The salaryman’s vision of his she-male girlfriend during a nightmare sequence (Tetsuo) 96 Figure 2.8 Stop-motion animated cords, cables, and assorted ligatures visualizing the rhizome in Tetsuo 99 Figure 2.9 The Iron Man phallic assemblage (Tetsuo) 108 Figure 3.1 Yabe discovers a black stain on the wall where Taguchi killed himself (Kairo) 129 Figure 3.2 Michi witnesses her friend Kawashima turn into a black shadow (Kairo) 131 Figure 3.3 Ash gazes upon 2D explosion-planes in a virtual battlefield within the Avalon game (Avalon) 135 ppaall--bbrroowwnn22--0000ffmm..iinndddd vviiii 66//99//1100 1122::1177 PPMM viii ILLUSTRATIONS Figure 3.4 The Game Master addresses Ash (Avalon) 138 Figure 3.5 The Magrittean juxtaposition of night and day at Ash’s apartment building (Avalon) 142 Figure 3.6 Ash disintegrates into 2D strips and is enveloped by data (Avalon) 145 Figure 3.7 Ash awakens in Class Real (Avalon) 146 Figure 3.8 An advertisement for West cigarettes in Class Real (Avalon) 148 Figure 3.9 Ash dons her own “Crown of Oblivion” (Avalon) 154 Figure 4.1 Power lines reflected on the eye of Lain (Serial Experiments Lain) 165 Figure 4.2 Against the backdrop of high-tension wires, Chisa dissolves into an Escheresque helix (Serial Experiments Lain) 166 Figure 4.3 Lain’s eyes reflect back her computer screen (Serial Experiments Lain) 169 Figure 4.4 Lain the machinic junkie (Serial Experiments Lain) 169 Figure 4.5 Lain enjoying the warm electronic embrace of the techno-womb (Serial Experiments Lain) 170 ppaall--bbrroowwnn22--0000ffmm..iinndddd vviiiiii 66//99//1100 1122::1177 PPMM Acknowledgments I wish to thank the many colleagues and friends who have encouraged me during the long genesis of this project, providing constructive feedback and inspiration when I most needed it, especially Daisuke Miyao, Susan Napier, Sharalyn Orbaugh, Tom Mes, Tom Looser, Christopher Bolton, Brian Ruh, Gerald Figal, Paul Young, Paul Atkins, Davinder Bhowmik, Ted Mack, Graham Parkes, Michael Stern, Ken Calhoon, and David Browne. Special thanks to Director Tsukamoto Shin’ya for taking the time to respond to my questions about his work. I would also like to express my gratitude to Brigitte Shull, Lee Norton, and Erin Ivy at Palgrave Macmillan for their strong support and gener- ous assistance, to Sarah Breeding and the copyeditors at Scribe for their keen-eyed corrections, and to the external reviewers for their helpful com- ments and suggestions. Thanks are also due to Frenchy Lunning and the University of Minnesota Press for permission to reprint portions of Part I, an earlier, much abridged version of which was published in Mechademia 3: Limits of the Human, ed. Frenchy Lunning (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008), 222–53. To my family, especially Katya, Gabriel, and Guinness, I owe a debt of gratitude for tolerating my rhizomatic engagements more than they should! This book is dedicated to all the students who have taken my Tokyo Cyberpunk seminar at the University of Oregon over the years. Note on Japanese Names and Words. In the text, Japanese names are typi- cally given in Japanese word order (unless they have been Anglicized)— that is, surname first and given name second. All Japanese words have been transliterated according to the modified Hepburn system of romanization used in Kenkyūsha’s New Japanese-English Dictionary, except in cases in which there are already accepted English spellings. ppaall--bbrroowwnn22--0000ffmm..iinndddd iixx 66//99//1100 1122::1177 PPMM
Description: