Sunday, October 19, 2014

My Relationship with Anime



      
LuckyStar
 When looking back on the role that anime has played in my life, it is difficult to define my interaction with anime as one specific relationship. I have been anime watching from when I was five years old up through my present time in college, so I have found that it has played many different roles for me throughout my life. Starting from the beginning of my history with anime, I would assume that it is not that different from many other people in the United States who are the same age as me and like anime. After coming home from Kindergarten each day I would turn on the television, eat a cookie and watch Pokémon and Sailor Moon
 
Sailor Moon
While almost everyone I know who is the same age as me was a fan of Pokémon when they were in Kindergarten, the series which I really think contributed into my getting into anime was Sailor Moon. I remember in second grade running around with my friend on the playground pretending to be the different sailor scouts. I think the aspects that really drew the show to me as a child were the magical transformations and the art style which was different from American style cartoons. Due to the similar art style I also found myself watching Cardcaptor Sakura when I was younger. During this time period, I would go to the bookstore with my parents every weekend and one day my mother pointed out to me that there was a book version of the Cardcaptor series. However, as I was only in second grade the right to left nature of the manga was confusing to me, so I didn’t really give it that much attention.  During this time period I didn’t know that this art style was something which fit under the genre of anime but this changed in third grade when I saw a girl in my class looking at a Sailor Moon book. She introduced me to a manga called Tokyo Mew Mew which is another mahou shoujo series similar to Sailor Moon and Cardcaptor Sakura. It was at this point when I discovered that these comics and cartoons were of Japanese origin and that there were many other shows like these that had more detailed art and a continuous story. As someone who didn’t really watch any shows that weren’t cartoons when I was younger, stories with more detailed and continuous plot were an improvement when all of the other cartoons on were mostly comedies that didn’t really follow an ongoing story.
Tokyo Mew Mew
 The discovery of anime and manga also brought a social aspect with it. My friends and I created a Tokyo Mew Mew club amongst ourselves in 5th grade and traded the comic around. Around this time period the main focus of my friends and I seemed to be manga rather than anime because we could bring it to school to exchange with each other. It was also a lot easier to find manga at this time period when anime DVDs were expensive and companies had not yet realized that putting anime up online legally with good quality was a good endeavor. Nevertheless, I mostly remember watching anime series which were based off of the manga I read with my friends, at my friend’s birthday parties with series such as Fruits Basket, D.N.Angel, and Full Moon o Sagashite

(There was an anime version of Tokyo Mew Mew released on U.S. television as Mew Mew Power; however, many content changes were made which did not exactly fit into how I thought the series should be.) 
Lovely Complex
In middle school, I spent a large amount of time online and reading forums with recommendations of anime to watch, and I found two of my favorite series, LuckyStar and Lovely Complex. As someone who is pretty shy I didn’t really talk about my interests in anime and manga to other people in my class except for my friends so I didn’t get looked at strangely, however my friends who liked to draw in an anime style and talk about it in class were talked about by some of my classmates in a negative way. I distinctly remember a kid in one of my classes talking about my friends who were in another class at the time saying “All they talk about is Bleach, Bleach, Bleach. They are so crazy, they must drink bleach.”  My friends were looked down upon for simply liking and talking about anime during the school day, which in retrospect was quite tame compared to some underclassmen at my High school who came to school for picture day wearing cosplay wigs and tails. My family on the other hand was quite supportive of my interest in manga and anime, buying and suggesting to my grandparents to buy me these things for birthdays and holidays. 

My mildly excessive collection of manga
 It was probably in high school when my interest in anime was at its highest. Anime was on Cartoon Network dubbed with a loyal translation every Friday night after midnight. I remember straining to keep myself awake through each episode of Fullmetal Alchemist after a week of schoolwork and little sleep. In 10th grade I would invite my friends over to watch the shows with me. One thing we used to do, which is a bit embarrassing looking back on it, was film ourselves acting out what was happening on shows where we didn’t know what was going on and then laugh about how badly we were able to act out the scenes as they happened. I watched the series Code Geass and The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya in High school with my friends when they came over to visit as well. In looking up the voice actor for the series Code Geass, my friends and I discovered that there was an anime convention which was only a half hour away from where we lived. We went to the convention without buying tickets ahead of time and were lucky enough to get the final four tickets that didn’t break the fire code for the building. While at this convention we mostly spent our time in the dealer’s room looking at products to buy. We went a second year as well and spent most of that year watching panels on different subjects. However, we did not spend really any time talking to our fellow fans at the convention. 
Code Geass
My senior year of high school was quite busy and I did not get to spend a large amount of time on anime, however, my interest in anime helped me to make friends in my first week of college. I do not have time to go to bookstores as much as I did in high school so I do not really read any new manga these days, however whenever I am on break from school I usually watch a 12 episode long anime. Looking back on the series of anime that I tend to watch, I have found that the anime I watch by myself tend to fall under the shoujo genre, however the series that I watch with my friends tend to have more action or fall under the shonen genre.  I think this is because I really like the character development which occurs in the shoujo genre and can pay attention to it when I am by myself. When watching other genres with my friends I don’t have to pay much attention and have time to joke around. I don’t know if it would be accurate to call myself an otaku because I have many other interests as well. Anime and manga do not completely control my life, although they have played a big role in it. In addition, my friend just recently told me that she wants to watch the entirety of Naruto with her, so it seems that whether I want it to or not, anime will continue to play a role in my life for a long while.

4 comments:

  1. ( yes I actually wrote this comment at 1 am, so if any spelling errors, misplacement of words, or any other typo occurs you can blame 1 am) From reading several other blog essays, I am noticing a pattern or at least many common themes. The first and most obvious is the juggernaut multi-media franchise known as Pokemon. It appears that everyone growing up in the time we did was affected by Pokemon. It was a cultural phenomenon in the states for a good couple of years, and still is a major cultural force in Japan. The second theme I noticed was the sense of unity and friendships which formed around the common love of Anime. If Mizenko Sensei ever reads this comment, I really hope that he also notices the same trend that I did.

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  2. As you noted on your comment to my blog, we definitely do share a lot of the same anime and manga as our basis for where we got interested/ how we stayed interested. Besides Sailor Moon, which seems to be a commonly remember series,I know Cardcaptor Sakura was a show that I watched regularly. (By the way, the sub is now on Crunchyroll, though you might have already known that.) I recall the dub of Tokyo Mew Mew, but it was not successful at holding my interest. However, Lovely Complex was a big manga for me that I followed through my local library. (I appreciated that a tall girl was the main character as I fell into the tall category for much of grade school.) I agree that usually I do not watch shojo with others. I think my reason for that is they are often more dramatic and less comedic, so there is less to enjoy as a group and more to reflect on personally. Finally,I must note that your manga collection is awesome.

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  3. The anecdote about acting out scenes with your friends is really possibly my favorite snippet out of all the blossays I've looked at so far. In retrospect, it may be embarrassing to a degree, but to me, it sounds like you were very close with those friends and that you guys found something you all shared a passion for and found a lot of humor and happiness in. Attending cons together also sounds like an enviable experience. As such a hugely social gathering, I can only imagine that one's enjoyment of a convention increases directly proportionally to the number of people one can enjoy it with and how much one can go in and come out with, materially!

    I myself can usually barely manage a 12 episode series even if I have someone who urges me to watch with them, but I have found for myself that manga is still a much easier medium to access. In that way, I have found myself gravitating more towards shoujo or shoujo style manga when I read for personal entertainment and to kill a lot of time. There's a difference to the story structures and atmospheres of shoujo and shounen that I never really appreciated before. I think I never really had the exposure to series that I now hear so much about, like Sailor Moon, Cardcaptor Sakura, and Tokyo Mew Mew, but now that I can look back, I would like to try them now. Better late than never!

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  4. I just want to open up by saying that I adore the layout of your blog--the font color and the background is great, you also did really well in organizing your blossay and including photos, etc. As I was reading through your blog, I found that I knew almost all of the anime/manga you read and had also read/watched the same stories in about the same order as you. Reading through other blossays showed that most people began with same anime, Sailor Moon and Pokemon, which also held true for you. Unlike your story however, after initially getting into the Shoujo genre instead of staying stroctly connected to said genre, I branched out like crazy and investigated TONS of other genres. I think because of this I was able to find a much larger anime community to interact with and therefore did not get a lot of (if any) harassment at school. It's unfortunate that you had to endure that crap, but it's great you had a nice band of friends to have your back and enjoy the excitement of anime/manga together :)

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