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07-19-2007, 10:24 PM
I really appreciate various opinions about how anime characters are represented. I'll try to see this issue from a slightly different aspect today.
As TV animaiton programmes aired in the 1950s in Japan, most anime programmes were from the US, such as Tom&Jerry, Betty, Popeye etc. Of course, till 1966, all the programmes on TV were black and white, so that viewers didn't recognise clearly what skin colour the characters had. And the first domestic anime programmes started on TV, aka (Testuwan Atom)Astro Boy, but they were basically targetting boys. Even though there were female characters in following domestic anime programmes, most females were not the leads. At that point, female robots/cyborg bodies were often used which represented non-Japanese (but they speak Japanese, so viewers could recognise them as Japanese). But I'd like to point out that the anime programmes targetting girls started in 1966, Mahou Tsukai Sari (Sally the Witch). In the middle of the series, colour TV started. Sally, the first protagonist in anime programmes for girls, was obviously a non-Japanese. (She is from the Magic Kingdom). And along with her, western lifestyles were introduced as a sophisticated, modern, cool and heroic things, whereas traditional Japanese lifestyles were compared to her lifestyles. Since then, western representations are quite often associated with heroines, who of course are 'good' ones. Since I'm interested in girl characters and how viewers (especially female viewers) identify themselves as anime heroines, I think that the way in which the West is associated with protagonists is so important and I really want to know how viewers internarised/naturalised those representations to make their self-images. These tendencies haven't changed a lot even now. I don't deny that anime characters are 'internationalised', though. |
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m -
07-20-2007, 01:05 AM
Now that its been mentioned I actualy have noticed that light skinned people want to look tanner and tan skinned people want to look lighter. So maybe people want what they cant have? The grass is much geener on the other side...that kindda thing?
Anyway, I do agree that anime was originaly trying to be like american cartoons so the style developed from that. Im not sure if speaking Japanese is an indecation that the characters are Japanese. On american TV if a character is in/from a diffrent country or even a diffrent world, the character will often be speaking english just for the conveniants of the veiwers. I only consider them to be Japanese if they have Japanese names or live in Japan. If neither of those things are true then I wouldnt assume them to be Japanese. I also notice that if a character is from another world or outer space or somthing, there culture will be conveniantly simiealar to the culture of the country they are from (its all eiseir for the creators if they dont have to think up a new culture and/or language) I cant think of any specific examples from american TV or animation, but in Urusei Yatsura, Lum is an alian, but somehow happens to know Japanese and most (all?) of Japans customs and culture, aparantly her planets culture is the same as Japanese culture, because its the same with all her freinds . |
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07-20-2007, 06:14 AM
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What I think is sadder is American women filling their lips with fat and their boobs with silicon, tanning themselves into leather. That's even less natural. In the old days, in Japan, blackened teeth were also considered a beauty point. If teeth were too white it meant she wasn't a hard worker. |
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07-20-2007, 06:22 AM
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agreed -
07-21-2007, 01:37 AM
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But thats kinda my point. When american woman inlarge there breasts or try to look tanner they arent nessasarily trying to look like ant specific race but they are trying to deny who they are as an individual, which is just as sad as trying to deny who you are in terms of race or nationality. So even if you make standards of buety that are unlike how you are or how your race is (even if your not tying to look like any other race), is just sad. |
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07-26-2007, 04:40 PM
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now that when most japanse image 'the West', they mean 'America' as a collective term by that, but there were surely some layers between American images and European images. I'm not sure, but Miyazaki and Takahata love Europe, not America, which is because , as MMM-san says, something has to do with Lost of WWII. |
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