This collection charts the terrain of contemporary Japanese animation, one of the most explosive forms of visual culture to emerge at the crossroads of transnational cultural production in the last twenty-five years. The essays offer bold and insightful engagement with anime's concerns with gender identity, anxieties about body mutation and technological monstrosity, and apocalyptic fantasies. The contributors dismantle the distinction between "high" and "low" culture and offer compelling arguments for the value and importance of the study of anime and popular culture as a key link in the translation from the local to the global.
"Both cinema and animation have served simultaneously as transnational cultural forms as well as national forums, formed by specific discourses on nationalism and modernization. In fact, in the 1910s-20s Japan, animation was not defined as distinct from cinema in terms of social regulations or production concerns. Animation, together with cinema, came under the scrutiny of public educators, censors and national ideologues. The point of intersection for these diverse concerns was the construction of national cinema for international dissemination. The attempt of Cinema Anime to dismantle the distinction between cinema and animation, national cinema and transnational visual culture, is genuinely challenging, but definitely necessary in the tension-ridden period of media globalization."
-Daisuke Miyao, University of Oregon, USA
“Cinema Anime is an important and thought-provoking collection of essays by a number of the leading figures in the field. It includes some of the first scholarly work on several challenging and noteworthy anime that have not received enough academic attention up to now. With chapters that range from cross-cultural overviews to ambitious critical interventions, this volume will be of interest to a wide audience, from students to experienced scholars. Indeed, Cinema Anime should be required reading for anyone committed to anime criticism.”
-Christopher Bolton, Senior Editorial Board, Mechademia
"The brain is the screen," as quoted in the introduction, is an apt expression of Cinema Anime's aim—to keep thinking in new ways about anime even as it gains its mindshare, to take new positions towards it even as it finds its place. Its academics know where to look within—LAIN, the one show that best learned the liberating message of EVANGELION; Satoshi Kon, the most important anime director to emerge in the past decade—and without, showing how film technology itself informs the narrative of anime and how contemporary installation artists draw it forth from flatland to examine our real space. Cinema Anime rephrases the question: where anime is, rather than what it is to be defined.
-Carl Gustav Horn, author of Strange Colors: The Power of Japanese Animation
The Anime Screen; S. T. Brown
PART I: TOWARDS A CULTURAL POLITICS OF ANIME
Excuse Me, Who Are You? Performance, the Gaze, and the Female in the Works of Kon Satoshi; S. Napier
The Americanization of Anime and Manga: Negotiating Popular Culture; A. Levi
The Advent of Meguro Empress: Decoding the Avant-Pop Anime TAMALA 2010; T. Takayuki
PART II: POST-HUMAN BODIES IN THE ANIMATED IMAGINARY
Frankenstein and the Cyborg Metropolis; S. Orbaugh
Animated Bodies and Cybernetic Selves: The Animatrix and the Question of Post-Humanity; C. Silvio
The Robots from Takkun's Head: Cyborg Adolescence in FLCL; B. Ruh
PART III: ANIME AND THE LIMITS OF CINEMA
The First Time as Farce: Digital Animation and the Repetition of Cinema; T. LaMarre
"Such Is the Contrivance of the Cinematograph": Dur(anim)ation, Modernity, and Edo Culture in Tabaimo's Animated Installations; L. Monnet
STEVEN BROWN is Associate Professor of Japanese Literature and Popular Culture at the University of Oregon, USA.