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-List Of Titles -Manga/anime, media mix : scholarship in a post-modern, global community

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/36473

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Title
Manga/anime, media mix : scholarship in a post-modern, global community
Related
College of Arts, Education and Social Sciences Conference (7 - 9 October 2005 : Bankstown, N.S.W.)
Related
Atherton, Michael. CAESS Conference : scholarship and community, p.1-10
Publisher
Sydney : University of Western Sydney
Date
2006
Author/Creator
Bryce, Mio
Author/Creator
Davis, Jason
Description
Advances in telecommunication technologies have massively altered the landscapes within which human relationships and self perspectives are enacted. Electronically transmitted, inter-linked spaces (e.g., via Internet, mobile phones and DVDs) are now part of our daily lives, fusing the virtual and the real, and revealing our fragile identity and stability as individuals. Manga (Japanese cartoons) and anime (animated manga) represent some of the most popular media circulating through global communities today, offering vast, imaginary sites for shielding people’s injured, suppressed and shaken individuality which has intensified from the pressures of continuous social competitions and conformity. This paper discusses how the study of manga/anime as visually crafted experiences can reflect the fluid and hybrid complexity of contemporary society through rich narratives as well as kaleidoscopic representations. Treating these representations as scholarly “objects” therefore involves linking diverse disciplinary fields such as literature, education, psychology, cultural studies, religious studies, history, anthropology, politics and consumerism. Most manga/anime are story-driven and are able to deal with “nearly every imaginable subject” (Schodt, 1996). Their readerships range from infants to mature men/women while their contents and styles differ widely. They have also evolved with and are linked to other communication media, such as electronic games, the Internet, and mobile phones. Manga/anime are therefore situated as pivotal points for inter-disciplinary and cross-cultural research into not only contemporary Japan but also post-modern society in general.
Description
10 page(s)
Subject Keyword
manga
Subject Keyword
anime
Subject Keyword
Japan
Subject Keyword
multimodal narratives
Subject Keyword
art form
Subject Keyword
commodity
Subject Keyword
cultural intersections
Subject Keyword
resources for interdisciplinary studies
Resource Type
conference paper
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Asian Languages

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/36473
Identifier
ISBN:1741081270
Identifier
mq-rm-2006001457
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"CAESS Conference : scholarship and community"
 
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