In the late 1960s, the Japanese animation inaugurated a prolific science fiction strand which addressed the topic of mediated experience. In a context of transnational reception and consumption of anime, the “robotic” subgenre (particularly the one that will be called “mecha” in the 1980s, i.e., narratives of giant robots piloted by a human within) occupies a strategic place. By highlighting the peculiar synergy between themes, forms of storytelling and “out-of-joint” consumption, the Japanese robotic animation series thematized and popularized content and perspectives on mediated experience that I define as “eco-phenomenological”: “phenomenological” because (i) it reevaluates the quality of the subjective experience in its historical and b...
This article examines ethnographically the production of anime (Japanese animated films and TV shows...
Animated manga films are a form of manga consumption reflecting strong popular demand for this art f...
In her article "Japanese Science Fiction and Conceptions of the (Human) Subject" Maria Poulaki discu...
In the late 1960s, the Japanese animation inaugurated a prolific science fiction strand which addres...
Au Japon, le développement du manga et du dessin animé est indissociable de la science-fiction et du...
L’ipotesi che sta alla base di questo articolo è che possa esistere un nesso fra il successo dei car...
This essay not only disregards privileged signifiant which is called newtype in Mobile Suit Gundam a...
The opening theme to Cartoon Network's animated series MEGAS XLR (2004) exclaims:"You dig giant robo...
Current Japanese animation has shifted to present posthumanism as a formative tool towards the estab...
Relationships between humans and humanoid machines, like robots, androids and physical embodiments o...
Taking up Sergei Eisenstein’s notion of plasmaticness or plasmaticity (Russian “plasmatichnost”), th...
International audienceThis article studies two great ecological movies by the Japanese animation and...
This article analyzes the role of animism in the creation and production of humanoid robots. In Jap...
This is a study of primarily post-millennial Japanese Anime texts, drawn from the science-fiction ge...
Cyberpunk anime often stage postapocalyptic and hyper-technological futures. By recognizing the narr...
This article examines ethnographically the production of anime (Japanese animated films and TV shows...
Animated manga films are a form of manga consumption reflecting strong popular demand for this art f...
In her article "Japanese Science Fiction and Conceptions of the (Human) Subject" Maria Poulaki discu...
In the late 1960s, the Japanese animation inaugurated a prolific science fiction strand which addres...
Au Japon, le développement du manga et du dessin animé est indissociable de la science-fiction et du...
L’ipotesi che sta alla base di questo articolo è che possa esistere un nesso fra il successo dei car...
This essay not only disregards privileged signifiant which is called newtype in Mobile Suit Gundam a...
The opening theme to Cartoon Network's animated series MEGAS XLR (2004) exclaims:"You dig giant robo...
Current Japanese animation has shifted to present posthumanism as a formative tool towards the estab...
Relationships between humans and humanoid machines, like robots, androids and physical embodiments o...
Taking up Sergei Eisenstein’s notion of plasmaticness or plasmaticity (Russian “plasmatichnost”), th...
International audienceThis article studies two great ecological movies by the Japanese animation and...
This article analyzes the role of animism in the creation and production of humanoid robots. In Jap...
This is a study of primarily post-millennial Japanese Anime texts, drawn from the science-fiction ge...
Cyberpunk anime often stage postapocalyptic and hyper-technological futures. By recognizing the narr...
This article examines ethnographically the production of anime (Japanese animated films and TV shows...
Animated manga films are a form of manga consumption reflecting strong popular demand for this art f...
In her article "Japanese Science Fiction and Conceptions of the (Human) Subject" Maria Poulaki discu...