hontou ni
10Mar/0912

Why does Nanoha serve?

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I am delighted to hear the news of forthcoming 25 year old Nanoha. Because it means the possibility of seeing MOAR Nanoha x Fate yuri love love.

In a timely note, DKellis posed and explored a fascinating question: Could Nanoha refuse to join the TSAB?

Join the TSAB! Travel to exotic, distant worlds, meet exciting, unusual people and *befriend* them.

My initial reaction was: Why the heck wouldn't she join?

17May/084

CIO-KCL research seminar on Japan's manga and anime industries

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Got wind of this seminar, organized by the Creative Industries Observatory, via Anime Infatuation, and popped by Strand Poly yesterday. A quick rundown of my main takeaways and reflections on the presentations.

10May/083

Missing Mom This Spring

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I've definitely been reading too much about comparative methodology recently. While having lunch, out of the blue, the thought just popped into my mind that the common thread running through the small handful of anime series that I'm watching this season involved protagonists whose moms are absent from their lives.

25Apr/0813

We don’t need no comment function

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I never really understood why Author disabled comments on Ani?Nouto, mainly because I am a comment whore; on the whole, I've enjoyed the witticisms, benefited from pointers, been introduced to new artists/pr0n as well as being reassured that the posts are not disappearing into a black hole. Thus his post on Os helped me to understand that he is a Man on a Mission.

Events like the ABA aim to build community. While 'spectaculars' can grab attention and focus minds, the thickness and stickiness of community (like a good gravy) comes from the more mundane practices of everyday animu blogging - such as outgoing links to other posts, something which I try to do in most of my posts.

This is probably due to reading too much academic stuffz in general and Michel de Certeau in particular. But the standard four questions of academic research can sometimes be useful for animu blogging too:

  1. What's the point you're making? [Research question]
  2. Why should others care? [Relevance]
  3. How are you going to make your case? [Methodology]
  4. Who else has written on this already? [Literature Review]

This applies to both good episodic and editorial posts. Outgoing links are kind of like citations / references. They show that you are aware of other points of view. And they are also a useful tool against tl;dr - a shorthand to point readers to information, ideas, arguments that you need not reinvent the wheel rehashing yet again. Some posts, like some seminal academic books or articles, gain classic status by getting cited/linked repeatedly e.g. on AWESOMENESS, the monomyth or Insane Rants Full of Hatred.

Having said that, comments are kind of like peer review or refereeing. Their sheer convenience was also one reason why I was told about Gundam SEED Chara Theatre while Evirus was not. ;)

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26Mar/086

Anime piracy as a demand creation and sales generation phenomenon

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Dr Nissim Kadosh Otmazgin, Kyoto University, recently published an article 'Contesting soft power: Japanese popular culture in East and Southeast Asia', International Relations of the Asia Pacific, Vol.8 No.1 (2007) which examines the relationship between Japanese cultural products and Japanese soft power. In the second section of the article, he discusses the proliferation of Japanese games, anime/manga, live action TV drama and karaoke in East Asia, concluding that:

23Mar/081

Belgian researcher needs Asian survey respondents

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Ah yes, I know the pain of trying to get a decent sample size for a survey questionaire. And so, this is an appeal to help out Dirk Haas who needs respondents who live in Asia in particular but others are fine too:

I am a fifth year student in psychology and I am currently enquiring about the look that we, as the human beings, bring upon "Japanese animation", a derived product of the "manga". In order to complete this research, I will need help from all of you. It will be about looking an extract from the Japanese animation "BLEACH", and answer to an anonymous questionnaire about the preceding extract.

In order to complete, or to bring further my researches, I would like you to "lent" me 20 minutes of your time to answer the questions. To do so, just press the link below which will immediately redirect you to the questionnaire.

I hope to see plenty of you. See you soon.

Click here for the questionaire.

He'll keep the survey up until about Friday, 28 Mar 2008, 2359 hrs GMT. So spread some good karma and animu rabu around! Minna-sama arigatou gozaimasu!

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15Mar/089

Pun with Kabitzin: An Ethnographic Note on Anime Blog Tagline Construction

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Aims. This post locates itself within the context of anime culture research. Its main contribution to knowledge is the record of empirical material of interest, namely the archiving of taglines by Kabitzin of the Sea Slugs! Anime Blog. It also aims to contribute to analytical and theory developoment of the Mixed Up Mind theory (Ender, 2008).

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13Nov/067

On the consideration of the similarities and dissimilarities between the Malus and Citrus genera

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Cory of Renegade Anime Blog poses the interesting question of whether anime blog aggregators operating on 'closed garden' (blogsuki) versus 'open acceptance' (animenano) principles result in less episode summary/reviews and more editorial posts being showcased. Based on the data presented, the answer is somewhat inconclusive. He renews his call for less episode summaries/reviews and more editorials as well as more commenting and trackbacks. Meanwhile Michael of anime|otaku proposes economic and psychological reasons for the continued dominance of the episode summary/review style of anime blogging.

This post examines some research design issues related to Cory's initial line of enquiry before considering the normative assumptions and prescription that underlies the study. It goes on to suggest an additional reason for the popularity of the episode summary/review style.

23Oct/0630

Female revolt in male cultural imagination in contemporary Japan

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Sharon Kinsella, currently Visiting Professor at MIT's Dept of Foreign Languages and Literature, delivered the 4th Chino Kaori lecture on the above-mentioned title at my alma mater, SOAS, on 2006-10-20. Among Kinsella's published work, her most famous to date is Adult Manga: Culture and Power in Contemporary Japanese Society (1999). The lecture will be published by the Sainsbury Institute at a later date and draws on material from her forthcoming book, Girls and Male Imagination: Fantasies of rejuvenation in contemporary Japan.

Kinsella traces images of female revolt, manifested through acts of violence and sexual liberation, in various media - films, novels, manga and anime and the accompanying dicussion among journalistic and intellectual circles. She points out the irony that this cultural material and the academic discourse is produced almost exclusively by older men. While many of these left-leaning intellectuals claim to be giving a sympathetic voice to the theme of feminist liberation, Kinsella questions if their subjectivity can be truly representative and that their efforts may, perversely, result in another male appropriation of the female voice for its own purposes.

29Sep/0622

Anti-Americanism in Anime

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In Anime Podcast #10, JP Meyer gave a pithy response, along the lines of "not really", to a comment and question by Thor about whether increased anti-US sentiment in anime will affect anime sales in the US. I shared Thor's impression that in blood+ and Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 2nd Gig, the US has not been portrayed favourably. In addition to these two Production IG series, we've also seen SUNRISE draw a parallel between the US and the Blue Cosmos/Logos controlled Atlantic Federation with its capital in Washington D.C. and its puppet president Copeland in Gundam SEED Destiny.

This post attempts to look at the definitional problems that reflect the often confused and contradictory character of anti-Americanism and disentangle how separate levels of analysis are often conflated. Furthermore, this post argues that many of these ideas and themes regarded as "anti-American" are echoed in or even influenced by US political science, literary, cinematic and popular culture sources.

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