Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/26628
Title: The Dō (ing) on Screen: Analyzing the Mediatization of the Cultural Practice of Karate-dō through The Karate Kid Series
Authors: Niyas, Fathima Nuzla Mohammed
Keywords: American Cinema, Japanese Cultural Practice, Karate-dō, The Karate Kid
Issue Date: 2023
Publisher: Faculty of Humanities, University of Kelaniya
Citation: Niyas Fathima Nuzla Mohammed (2023), The Dō (ing) on Screen: Analyzing the Mediatization of the Cultural Practice of Karate-dō through The Karate Kid Series, 6th International Conference on the Humanities (ICH 2023), Faculty of Humanities, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. P148
Abstract: This research examines the American cinematization of the Japanese martial art and cultural practice of Karate-dō and the trivialization of its socio-political history of origin and cultural significance by representing it as a media spectacle in the context of the relations between America and Japan in the post-World War II era. Karate is a cultural practice and a practice of resistance that emerged under the specific socio-political contexts of Okinawa before being adopted and institutionalized as Japanese martial art and sport. The relationship between Japan and America during World War II and the American Occupation of Japan is based on the dynamics of power between the hegemonic America and the culturally Othered Japan. The study analyses three films, The Karate Kid (1984), The Karate Kid 2 (1986), and The Karate Kid 3 (1989), to understand how American cinema creates a cultural Other through the spectacularization, exoticization, and commodification of the cultural and technical elements of Karate-dō. The conceptualization of the research and the analysis of the films are conducted through existing scholarship on the definitions of culture and the role of martial arts in media against the background study of the origin of karate and the relationship between post-World War II America and Japan. The research utilizes textual analysis of existing scholarship, and visual analysis of the films to study the representation of the cultural and technical elements of Karate-dō. As a cultural practice, critical analysis of the films reveals that Karate-dō is appropriated as a media commodity by American cinema to corroborate its hegemony over Japan. Therefore, exoticization and commodification of cultures within media functions as a tool to concretize stereotypes, and perpetuate racism and discrimination against minority or different cultural identities and practices.
URI: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/26628
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