The Rashomon effect is a storytelling and writing method in cinema in which an event is given contradictory interpretations or descriptions by the individuals involved, thereby providing different perspectives and points of view of the same incident. The term, derived from the 1950 Japanese film Rashomon, is used to describe the phenomenon of the unreliability of eyewitnesses.
Effect
The effect is named after Akira Kurosawa's 1950 film Rashomon, in which a murder is described in four contradictory ways by four witnesses.[1]
The term addresses the motives, mechanism, and occurrences of the reporting on the circumstance and addresses contested interpretations of events, the existence of disagreements regarding the evidence of events, and subjectivity versus objectivity in human perception, memory, and reporting.
The Rashomon effect has been defined in a modern academic context as "the naming of an epistemological framework—or ways of thinking, knowing, and remembering—required for understanding complex and ambiguous situations".[2]
The history of the term and its permutations in cinema, literature, legal studies, psychology, sociology, and history is the subject of a 2015 multi-author volume edited by Blair Davis, Robert Anderson and Jan Walls, titled Rashomon Effects: Kurosawa, Rashomon and their legacies.[3]
Valerie Alia termed the same effect "The Rashomon Principle" and has used this variant extensively since the late 1970s, first publishing it in an essay on the politics of journalism in 1982.[citation needed] She developed the term in a 1997 essay "The Rashomon Principle: The Journalist as Ethnographer" and in her 2004 book, Media Ethics and Social Change.[4][5]
A useful demonstration of this principle in scientific understanding can be found in Karl G. Heider's 1988 journal article on ethnography.[6] Heider used the term to refer to the effect of the subjectivity of perception on recollection, by which observers of an event are able to produce substantially different but equally plausible accounts of it.
In the Queensland Supreme Court case of The Australian Institute for Progress Ltd v The Electoral Commission of Queensland & Ors (No 2), Applegarth J wrote that:
The Rashomon effect describes how parties describe an event in a different and contradictory manner, which reflects their subjective interpretation and self-interested advocacy, rather than an objective truth. The Rashomon effect is evident when the event is the outcome of litigation. One should not be surprised when both parties claim to have won the case.[7]
The vagaries of memories and how they depend on one's own identity and interests is also a theme of the unfinished 1963 Polish film Passenger (based on a 1959 radio play), in which an Auschwitz survivor and guard differently recall events in that Nazi concentration camp.
^Alia, Valerie (2004). Media Ethics and Social Change. Edinburgh, UK and New York City: Edinburgh University Press/Routledge US; Routledge US. ISBN9780415971997.
^The Australian Institute for Progress Ltd v The Electoral Commission of Queensland & Ors (No 2)[2020] QSC 174 (15 June 2020), Supreme Court (Qld, Australia).
^Bernstein, Richard (April 3, 1998). "'An Instance Of The Fingerpost': Many Voices Tell An Intricate Tale". The New York Times. Retrieved August 16, 2024. "An Instance of the Fingerpost" is told "Rashomon" style, by four different narrators, each of whom has only a partial understanding of events and only one of whom makes telling the truth his primary purpose.
^Handlen, Zack (June 11, 2011). "The X-Files: "Bad Blood" / Millennium : "Luminary"". The A.V Club. Retrieved November 5, 2024. This is a Rashomon episode, in which much of the running time is given over to either Mulder or Scully explaining their version of events.
^"Ryan Murphy responds to 'Monsters' criticism, says audience didn't understand". 2024-09-24. Retrieved 2024-10-30. If you need an example of what a Rashomon style episode of TV would look like, the Season 9 episode of How I Met Your Mother titled "The Ashtray" demonstrates it perfectly. Critically, it's a trope that relies on an event being told via flashback from various perspectives.
^Shivakumar, S. (2016-02-18). "A cult classic, and then..."The Hindu. ISSN0971-751X. Retrieved 2024-08-20. Rakshit Shetty: 'I'm a great fan of Kurosawa but I never thought of 'Rashomon' while writing the film.'
^Choe, Steve (2017–18). "Park Chan-wook's Critique of Moral Judgment: The Handmaiden (2016)"(PDF). Studies in the Humanities. 44 & 45 (1 & 2). Indiana University of Pennsylvania: 20. On the other hand, the very structure of The Handmaiden may be read to interrupt these pleasures and the sense of moral certitude that underpins it. Rashomon-like, the two parts of Park's film provide the viewer with two perspectives on the same event.
^Sims, David (2021-10-13). "Ridley Scott's New Film Plays a Masterly Trick". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2024-08-16. The story is told in the style of Rashomon, the 1950 film in which the same murder is recounted by several different characters. But Rashomon underscored the subjective nature of truth; in The Last Duel, each new storyteller works to peel back the self-aggrandizement of the last.