I suggest anyone who is interested in anime, is involved in the ‘Animation, Comics and Games’ subculture within the East Asian context (ACG), has friends who are anime geeks, or identifies as an ‘nijigen/erciyuan’ to have a look at Anime’s…
Tag Archive for anime
Anime’s Identity Crisis: Closed Borders, Global Networks, and the Neoliberal Self
by Colin Wheeler • March 8, 2022 • 0 Comments
Review of Stevie Suan. Anime’s Identity: Performativity and Form Beyond Japan. United States, University of Minnesota Press, 2021. Traditional scholarship on anime has left the identity of the media form as de facto Japanese, reducing a global industrial network into…
On Anime Superheroes
by Patrick Gwillim-Thomas • July 15, 2021 • 2 Comments
Tackling the subject of anime superheroes, both the graduate thesis “Superman vs. Goku: Different Cultural Values Represented in Superhero Characters in American and Japanese Comics”[1] and the widely viewed YouTube video essay How HeroAca and One Punch Man Flip the…
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…
Remixing Fyodor D.: The Sound of National Character(s) in Russian-Language Bungo Stray Dogs AMVs
by Mihaela Mihailova • October 14, 2019 • 5 Comments
Anyone who has ever responded to a call for papers has, at one point or another, experienced the perverse pleasure of stubbornly latching onto a topic that was not mentioned therein and running with it. It was in that contrarian…
The Early Work of Hayao Miyazaki
by Charles daCosta • January 21, 2019 • 3 Comments
Review of Raz Greenberg. Hayao Miyazaki: Exploring the Early Work of Japan’s Greatest Animator, New York/London: Bloomsbury, 2018. There are those who advocate history-less animation, curricula that focus on the teaching of techniques and technology. In his book, Hayao Miyazaki:…
20 Years of Mononoke
by Laura Montero • December 17, 2018 • 0 Comments
Review of Rayna Denison (ed.). Princess Mononoke: Understanding Studio Ghibli’s Monster Princess, New York/London: Bloomsbury, 2018. In March 2000, during a visit to the cinema, I chanced upon a mysterious poster design featuring a golden medallion embossed with the image of…
Time of Eve and the Posthuman Family
by Mihaela Mihailova • July 16, 2018 • 1 Comment
In 2007, a committee assembled by Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe and chaired by Abe’s science adviser Kiyoshi Kurokawa drafted Innovation 25, a strategic proposal that promised to stimulate economic growth by 2025 by investing in various aspects of technological…