Animals with human traits have populated the fables of Aesop and the fairytales of the Brothers Grimm to entertain and educate children and adults for hundreds of years. Therefore, is no great surprise that this aspect of the genre of…
Animation and animals
Small Birds, Big Quest: How “The Jasmine Birds” Conveys Overcoming a Dictator and a Deadly Virus in Syria
by Stefanie Van de Peer • November 2, 2020 • 0 Comments
In 2014 I wrote a short piece for this blog on Syrian animation and the changes the form had undergone during a time of civil unrest and war. With this new piece, I would like to delve deeper into one…
The Reigning Rooster: A Critique on the Characterization of Cartoon Chickens
by Rebecca Rose Stanton • October 12, 2020 • 3 Comments
Whilst researching how animals have been depicted by Walt Disney Animation Studios (WADAS)[1], I found that chickens were featured in nineteen WDAS films (34%) (Stanton, 2019). This makes chickens the most commonly depicted species of bird in WDAS films. This…
Ducks Don’t Back Down: Dream Voices and Dismissible Rage
by Devlin Grimm • October 5, 2020 • 0 Comments
Throughout human history, the labor of civil rights has been done by the oppressed. In disability advocacy especially, disability representation and media have been amplified, and critiqued, by the Disability Visibility Project. It is also the assertion of this community…
Animals, Animation, and Academia
by Rebecca Rose Stanton • June 15, 2020 • 7 Comments
According to a user poll on IMDB, Mickey Mouse, Bugs Bunny, Tom and Jerry, Scooby-Doo, and Donald Duck are five of the most recognizable animated characters of all time. As well as being recognizable, these animated characters all have one…
Allegorical Cats, Metaphorical Cats: “CATS” and the Pleasure of an Uneasy Image
by Devlin Grimm • December 16, 2019 • 1 Comment
Almost forty years after the spectacle-driven dance concert debuted in London, and almost six weeks after this blog post was written, the film adaptation CATS (2019, dir. Tom Hooper) will be released in theaters. The tagline “You Will Believe” would…
The Feline Phantom Thief. Cross-Dimensionality and Characterization in “Persona 5″’s Morgana
by Cole Armitage • December 9, 2019 • 2 Comments
At the time this is published, Persona 5 Royal (Persona 5: The Royal in Japan), an updated version of the smash-hit Japanese Role-Playing Game (JRPG) phenomenon Persona 5 (2016), will have just released in Japan on the PlayStation 4. The…
Mutated/ing Consumable Cats in Anime
by Rayna Denison • December 2, 2019 • 1 Comment
Japanese cinema and television shows are filled with ‘healing’ (iyashikei) images of cats. Cat actors in these live-action shows and films frequently adorn narratives that allow viewers to consume their kittenish cuteness, their languid decorativeness, or their playful viciousness for…
Life, Death, and “Cat Soup”
by Leah Holmes • November 25, 2019 • 2 Comments
The work of manga artist Nekojiru is distinctive for two key characteristics: short stories that contrast cuteness with cruelty, and the use of anthropomorphized cats as protagonists. This includes her autobiographical works, Jirujiru Ryokouki (Jirujiru Travelogue) and Jirujiru Nikki (Jirujiru…
America Does Not Want Bad Kitties. The Representation of Cats in “An American Tail”
by Genia Boivin • November 18, 2019 • 1 Comment
Cats have long been part of the lives and imaginations of humans. Egyptians worshiped the cat goddess Bastet, Persians feared these animals as potentially evil, Chinese aristocrats prized them for their rarity, American Puritans associated them with witchcraft, while the…