We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Oblivion beyond Forgetting: A Buddhist Reflection on Suffering in Ashes of Time.
- Authors
Choi, Heawon
- Abstract
This paper reads Wong Kar-wai's Ashes of Time (1994) through the lens of Buddhism, specifically focusing on the issue of suffering and of mind. Buddhism attributes suffering to mental attachment, expressed as craving and clinging. In this sense, Ashes of Time, which also reflects on the problems of anguish and suffering with respect to its characters' unfulfilled desires and their attachment to memory, shares several fundamental ideas with Buddhist thought. More importantly, the film proposes ways to break free from suffering that are similar to those espoused by Buddhism. In doing so, the film reflects the Buddhist dialectic idea that insists on absolute negation as the way to be released from suffering, which eventually progresses to an absolute affirmation; that is, embracing suffering in a paradoxical sense.
- Subjects
ASHES of Time (Film); WONG Kar-Wai, 1958-; SUFFERING in motion pictures; BUDDHISM in motion pictures; VIRTUES (Buddhism)
- Publication
Journal of Religion & Film, 2010, Vol 14, Issue 2, p1
- ISSN
1092-1311
- Publication type
Article