Is it a high or low cultural genre,
according to Napier (2005)? What are some of its subgenres?
Anime is an incredibly popular Japanese
genre of animation that is enjoyed internationally. It has often been debated whether
or not it is of a high or low cultural genre. This essay will discuss what
culture it belongs to, as well as the many sub genres that it has.
Anime can be argued to be apart of both
high culture and low culture, however the majority of society views it as being
a form low culture. Anime is still looked down upon by the older generations of
society, especially in Japan, as the older generations looks down at those who
are fans of anime as it is children’s cartoons (Napier, 2005) . In
contrast to this Anime has a lot of different sub genres and so it can be
accessible for almost any audience. However the range in genres does affects
the cultural standing that it has in society due to the huge subculture of
anime porn (Facade, 2011) . Porn is not
an accepted part of our society and so the popularity of anime porn tarnishes
the rest of the anime genre. Aspects such as historical reenactments,
educational lessons and stories with a good moral backbone get pushed aside.
It is important to realize that when anime
is compared to Disney animations that it is definitely apart of high cultured art.
This is to do many reasons, firstly Cartoons in the western world are often
seen as childish and meant for kids, where as anime in Japan is enjoyed by many generations (Napier, 2005) . This
is because there are deeper and darker undertones than the predictable Disney
stories. This unpredictability of the stories has been one of the main reasons
for its ability to be popular in the western world; it is not formulaic like
most of the western media (Napier, 2005) . Anime
is also very progressive in the way that it portrays characters and sexual
orientation, this is another reason that anime can be defined as a form of low
culture, as it is not what normally occurs in cartoons and can make some of the
older generations uncomfortable especially when pared with the notion that
cartoons are for children. Princess Mononoke is a clear example of this, the female
characters are powerful and have big roles in the stories narrative, and they
are not weak or defenseless (Miyazaki, 1997).
Anime will eventually become apart of the
high cultural art community as an understanding and acceptance of it grows. The
reason it is not accepted is that it is still viewed as childish or
inappropriate to the older generations. There is many aspects to anime and so
it is able to be accessible to everyone, however not everyone wants to embrace
it due to it current reputation.
References:
Napier, S. (2005). Why
anime? In Anime: From to Howl’s Moving
Castle (pp. 3-14). Hampshire:
Palgrave/Macmillian
Facade. (2011, August 29). Complete list of Anime Genres (with descriptions). Retrieved
August 31, 2015, from Anirecs Anime Blog: http://anirecs.com/anime-genre-list-with-descriptions/
Miyazaki, H. (Director). (1997 ). Princess Mononoke [Motion Picture].
Thanks Olivia, Good. I like your idea that older generations tend to become the "definers" and "protectors" of what is acceptable as literature or what is culturally valuable. Do you think Mononoke is high or low or both (you never directly answered that question and I am interested to know your opinion).
ReplyDeletePS - this blog was good but it felt like it needed a quick edit/read-through before you posted it. I noticed that the language was clearer in your two earlier posts.
ReplyDeleteHi Olivia. Anime is actually transliterated from the English word 'animation'. I am unsure if I can agree with Napier's statement of anime being looked down upon by the older generation in Japan because there are many genres and some anime is unsuitable for younger generations.
ReplyDeleteHi Olivia, based on your insight that the older generations become the "definers" (as Brendan puts it) would you then think that the genre will grow or diminish as the current generation enjoying Anime will itself become older and have a hand in defining its direction? Or do you think that as we become older we will eventually grow out of these genres as they are "children's cartoons"?
ReplyDelete