Solo Animation in Japan: Empathy for the Drawn Body

This chapter examines small-scale and self-produced Japanese animations as a site of intensified engagement with the work of making drawn bodies move. Focusing on animations by Wada Atsushi, Mizushiri Yoriko, and Kuno Yōko, the chapter explores the afterlife of “independent” animation as an oppositi...

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Main Author: Roquet, Paul
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Program in Comparative Media Studies/Writing
Format: Book chapter
Published: Routledge 2021
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/130240
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author Roquet, Paul
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Program in Comparative Media Studies/Writing
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Program in Comparative Media Studies/Writing
Roquet, Paul
author_sort Roquet, Paul
collection MIT
description This chapter examines small-scale and self-produced Japanese animations as a site of intensified engagement with the work of making drawn bodies move. Focusing on animations by Wada Atsushi, Mizushiri Yoriko, and Kuno Yōko, the chapter explores the afterlife of “independent” animation as an oppositional practice at a time when Japanese animation production as a whole is increasingly dependent on freelance and casualized labor. I introduce the term solo animation to designate works where the visual imagery onscreen is produced through the work of a single person. Solo animation is usually produced through great effort for little money, and with little to no expectation of financial gain. As this chapter argues, this turns solo animation into an important space for animators to reflect on the meaning of their own animating labor. The vulnerable forms of the bodies onscreen come to register external pressures shaping the practice of contemporary animation, including the industrial demands of the animation industry itself. In the process, these drawn bodies become a site of empathy for both animators and audiences alike.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1302402024-02-13T20:58:27Z Solo Animation in Japan: Empathy for the Drawn Body Roquet, Paul Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Program in Comparative Media Studies/Writing Roquet, Paul This chapter examines small-scale and self-produced Japanese animations as a site of intensified engagement with the work of making drawn bodies move. Focusing on animations by Wada Atsushi, Mizushiri Yoriko, and Kuno Yōko, the chapter explores the afterlife of “independent” animation as an oppositional practice at a time when Japanese animation production as a whole is increasingly dependent on freelance and casualized labor. I introduce the term solo animation to designate works where the visual imagery onscreen is produced through the work of a single person. Solo animation is usually produced through great effort for little money, and with little to no expectation of financial gain. As this chapter argues, this turns solo animation into an important space for animators to reflect on the meaning of their own animating labor. The vulnerable forms of the bodies onscreen come to register external pressures shaping the practice of contemporary animation, including the industrial demands of the animation industry itself. In the process, these drawn bodies become a site of empathy for both animators and audiences alike. 2021-03-24T21:29:53Z 2021-03-24T21:29:53Z 2020-08 Book chapter http://purl.org/eprint/type/BookItem 9781315534374 https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/130240 Roquet, Paul et al. "Solo Animation in Japan: Empathy for the Drawn Body." Routledge Handbook of Japanese Cinema, edited by Joanne Bernardi and Shota T. Ogawa, Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315534374-9 Routledge Handbook of Japanese Cinema Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ application/pdf Routledge Paul Roquet
spellingShingle Roquet, Paul
Solo Animation in Japan: Empathy for the Drawn Body
title Solo Animation in Japan: Empathy for the Drawn Body
title_full Solo Animation in Japan: Empathy for the Drawn Body
title_fullStr Solo Animation in Japan: Empathy for the Drawn Body
title_full_unstemmed Solo Animation in Japan: Empathy for the Drawn Body
title_short Solo Animation in Japan: Empathy for the Drawn Body
title_sort solo animation in japan empathy for the drawn body
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/130240
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