Abstract

This article analyzes images taken from a photo series, entitled Fushi Kaden, produced by Japanese photographer Suda Issei (b.1940). This series does not necessarily conform to a conventional understanding of archive in that images are both contemporary and purposely creative. However, my central interest is not to establish whether archives are in fact curated, but to understand Fushi Kaden in relation to writing on archive by Jacques Derrida and Michel Foucault. In Archive Fever, Derrida argues that archival impulse is inherently driven by a need to affirm identity. As I will argue, Fushi Kaden represents a turn to past by Suda in order to preserve, or uncover, an essential Japanese identity. This impulse reflects Suda’s condition as a modern subject who perpetually seeks self-recognition through turning to a mythical past. In The Archeology of Knowledge, Foucault contends that archive is the system of discursivity in a given society that ultimately determines accepted truth-value. In this sense, I will investigate how Suda’s photographic work functions within discourses about Japanese identity, an important undertaking given that photography retains a strong, although highly contestable, cultural association with absolute reality.

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