Japanese Modernity and the Manga and Anime Art Forms

Katherine Buljan, C. Cusack
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Abstract

This chapter examines the emergence of the manga and anime forms in terms of the historical development of Japanese artistic modes that are antecedent to these forms, and also through consideration of the development of Japanese modernity. It is argued that the manga and anime forms and Japanese modernity both retain traditional Eastern religious and aesthetic concerns, while freely appropriating Western religious and aesthetic motifs, which results in a unique new cultural synthesis that is equally appealing to Eastern and Western audiences. The intention of this chapter is to demonstrate that the earliest precursors of manga are a number of centuries old and that manga, and thus anime, is deeply embedded in the history of Japanese art, religion and life, as highlighted in certain studies. This interpretation is important in that it offers an alternative to the claim that the origins of the comic book aesthetic are European, and that the influence of Walt Disney (1901–1966) on early manga illustrators is more important than their Japanese forebears.
日本的现代性与动漫艺术形式
本章从先于这些形式的日本艺术模式的历史发展,以及对日本现代性发展的考虑,来考察漫画和动画形式的出现。作者认为,日本的漫画和动画形式和日本的现代性既保留了传统的东方宗教和美学关注,又自由地借鉴了西方的宗教和美学主题,从而形成了一种独特的新文化综合体,对东西方观众同样具有吸引力。本章的目的是证明漫画最早的前身有几个世纪的历史,漫画和动画深深地植根于日本艺术、宗教和生活的历史中,正如某些研究所强调的那样。这种解释很重要,因为它提供了另一种说法,即漫画书美学的起源是欧洲,沃尔特·迪斯尼(1901-1966)对早期漫画插画家的影响比他们的日本祖先更重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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