Statistics
Anime Stats
Days: 59.5
Mean Score:
6.98
- Watching11
- Completed282
- On-Hold8
- Dropped70
- Plan to Watch207
- Total Entries578
- Rewatched5
- Episodes3,706
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Manga Stats
Days: 5.4
Mean Score:
8.36
- Total Entries47
- Reread0
- Chapters829
- Volumes97
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All Comments (55) Comments
I have watched a few episodes of Outbreak Company and I hated it and I dropped it. The premise of the show is that every girl in the isekai is a complete idiots so the otaku protagonist can be constantly patronising the girls around him, putting up a condescending attitude and teaching them how to be a normal human being. I wouldn't think of it as a parody, but rather as one of the most otaku-pandering harem show. (The whole premise of "otaku culture conquering the heart of the people of isekai" is pandering enough...)
Sugimoto's arc is a particular great commentary on some neoconservative sentiments within Japanese media, especially with the death game genre (eg. Battle Royale), in which humanity is imagined to be inherently selfish and violent and the only way to protect your friends and yourself is to be skeptical of everyone and to relentlessly kill any one deemed as your enemy. Juuni Kokuki presents this blood-thirsty militant mentality as fundamentally delusional and just as prone to be manipulated as naive goodwill is (just like how nationalists are manipulated to fight wars for the politicians and the rich.) Yet the show never gave you those "it's wrong to kill anyone under any circumstance" bullshit, which happens in so many other anime that only try to pay lip service to pacifism because they want to appear decent. Instead, Youko learnt to be just, rather than to be an egoist or an unconditionally kind person. The later episodes mostly develop on the difficult question of "what does it mean to be a just person".
Youko is particularly relatable to me as someone who has an eastern background. As a kid growing up in Asia we're constantly told to "listen to your parents", "listen to your teacher", "don't let your parents down", etc., which is basically the life of Youko. Unlike many isekai anime nowadays, Juuni Kokuki put you into an isekai not to tell you how great you're, but how fucked up the society has raised you to become. I've made a similar point elsewhere and I guess it might be helpful for the discussion to quote it here:
It's precisely the opposite case with old isekai - in old isekai, what we see usually is that the protagonists face huge problem because their modern education is completely inapplicable there, so they are asymmetrically disadvantaged for the fact that they understand nothing there. The core subtext of the old isekai genre is a criticism of the stupefying effect of modern society - modern society is organised in such a way that people are increasingly dependent on technology, established rules, guidelines, institutions and authorities, while failing to cultivate those ethical virtues that help you go through new situation. In Digimon, the protagonists went through difficulties not by having better technical knowledge of the Digimon world than the villains had. They overcame their disadvantages by having virtues the villains didn't have.
The Twelve Kingdoms is the best example of it - it's a story about a model student in modern Japan who became a complete failure in an isekai, only get better as she learnt to think for herself, to constantly philosophise, to question popular beliefs and also her own prejudice, to break rules and to establish new rules, to make political and moral judgment that's her own, to look for answers to questions that no one yet has satisfactory solutions.
When is your birthday, I'll get you a hentai with pink guy.
I'm feeling ambivalent about the movement around Bernie Sanders because on one side I feel it's necessary in US to have something that create a movement to gravitate the political energy of the Left, even if it's just some centre-left social democrat, because the mainstream is not talking about any form of socialism at all. Of course ideally it should be the job of some real worker movement, but that doesn't seem to be a realistic thing to be expected in the US. But on the other hand, it's also dangerous for the Left to get itself too involved into electoral politics. Because under bourgeois democracy, Bernie Sanders will not be able to reform the system even if he is lucky enough to become the president. The Left might loss credit and the entire lump of politic energy that has been gravitated toward Sanders might dissipate once people is disillusioned about him. But I have no idea how we should deal with this situation. Worker movement has been a dead water in my country too. Most activists I know are either liberal or centre-left. Many of them are being co-opted by right-wing movement because they are the loudest people both on the street and on the internet. It's very frustrating.
I share with you the feeling about nostalgia too. K-ON especially hit me with a strong sense of nostalgia, of mono no aware ("the beautiful period of life has gone forever".) It didn't do that on me when I first watched it in 2009 when I was still a freshman in college, at the prime of my youth. But I'm almost constantly feeling nostalgic nowadays, and that's perhaps why I've been now watching more anime than ever. Also loneliness and the feeling of alienation seem to have become an inescapable fact of my life too. Have you heard of vaporwave? This youtube video does a really good job in analysing the 80s nostalgia that has recently becomes predominate in internet phenomena like vaporwave: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gSvUqhZcbVg
I think my own nostalgia has a lot to do with the fact that I can't picture myself having a satisfying, meaningful life in future, so my subconscious directs me to look for meaning in the past. I'm particularly excited when I read things about the revolutionary history of the 1910s, 20s and the 60s. Life seems to have meaningful goals back then when people were collectively trying to create a future for themselves. It seems that back then life wasn't just about working on a job that you despise because you have to pay for your rent for the next month...
Btw his channel is full of genuinely good philosophical stuff too.
What is the interesting thing about Marxism is that there's a surprising amount of Marxist thinkers who take art and literature very very seriously (even though one may suppose it's something belongs to the superstructure.) Marx and Engels themselves talked about Balzac at length.The Chinese communist party was literally born out of a cultural-literary movement of the 1920s. Mao himself took literature very seriously. Culture was seen as a revolutionary weapon. It's much difficult now to have something like that now because pop culture has replaced high culture as the central phenomenon, but I think it's not impossible for us to engage with pop culture in the intense way as people engaged with Dostoevsky and Kafka. For example I have always been thinking that the rise of iyashikei and slice of life anime has a lot to do with the burst of Japan bubble economy in mid-1990s, which created the neoliberal state of hyper-competition, over-working, job insecurity, lost of sense of purpose/direction, and loneliness. The absence of masculinity, definite goal and competitiveness in most SoL show is precisely the reaction to the grim reality many young adult experience. Understanding why we at this particular point of history, would find in SoL show some sort of consolation we need, is understanding our situation in capitalism. And that self-understand would encourage people to work for a change: you see a utopian vision in K-ON, you see what's wrong with capitalism. But there is just not enough Marxists out there trying to use pop culture to help people understand their misery. A lot of liberal agenda in pop culture in the West, but most of them are superficial and they almost always avoid a direct criticism of capitalism.
Sorry I digress a lot. It's my bad habit to be absorbed in my own thought. Goblin Slayer: it's really the shit I don't understand how it got so popular in the first place. I'm not even talking about how it sexualises rape scene. The quality of the animation is just very very bad for an action show. It's so obviously mediocre even by the standard of a corny, edgy, mindless blood-spilling action show. I guess it's only popular among teenagers who's new to anime but I might be wrong about that.
I haven't seen Koi Kaze. Will give it a try at some point. Oh Kodomo no Jikan, I'm ambivalent on this one because it does have real drama and some depth as you said, but there's also another side of it which makes me wonder which really comes in priority for the show. Like, the original manga and the OVAs the sexual appeal take a more obviously central place, so it makes me think whether or not the whole drama is a convoluted excuse for create a fictional girl who acts like that to provide some guilt-free sexual satisfaction to the audience. (To clarify a bit, I'm having questions about the sincerity of the show rather than sexual morality. I don't really buy into the Western Christian puritan ideal but it's another long story.) But all in all it's a pretty unique show and it had me engaged for most of the time. But I didn't give it a higher score partly because of it's mediocre art.