<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0" ><tr><td valign="top" style="font: inherit;"><br><blockquote style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"><pre><br>Upcoming event at the International Research Center for Japanese Studies,<br>Kyoto, Japan:<br><br><br>Nichibunken Evening Seminar on Japanese Studies (134th Meeting)<br>January 15, 2009 (Thursday), 4:30 P.M.-6:00 P.M.<br><br>Speaker: Thomas LAMARRE<br>Professor, Department of East Asian Studies, McGill University, Canada<br><br>Topic: “The Theatre of Species: Race and Animals in Wartime Animation”<br>Language: English<br>Place: Seminar Room 2, International Research Center for Japanese Studies,<br>3-2 Oeyama-cho, Goryo, Nishikyo-ku, Kyoto 610-1192<br><br>URL: http://www.nichibun.ac.jp/<br><br>Abstract:<br>In the manga and manga films of prewar Japan, especially in those animations<br>that fell under the rubric of ‘national policy film’
(kokusaku eiga) or<br>‘educational film’ (kyiku eiga) of the 1930s and 1940s, relations among<br>human peoples are often translated into relations among animal species. Prime<br>examples are the Norakuro series and the Momotar series. Central to such manga<br>and manga films is an exploration of the dynamics of cooperation/competition in<br>the context of animal interactions. Manga and animation construct a theater of<br>operations in which the cuteness of animals serves to ground a sense of<br>cooperation in the midst of military and economic competition. This parallels<br>the wartime effort to imagine multiethnic empire and co-prosperity. Both entail<br>a critique of social Darwinism and classical liberalism.<br>Manga and animations, however, afford a very particular perspective on the<br>politics of Japanese empire, on Pan-Asianism and multiethnic empire: they<br>respond to the question of racial conflict and rivalry by
evoking<br>‘plasmaticity’ a primordial plasticity inherent in animals and maybe in<br>life itself. The talk will focus on the dynamics and implications of the<br>translation of racial, ethnic and national relations into animal or species<br>relations, with an emphasis on the specificity of the theatre of operations<br>implicit in prewar manga and manga films.<br><br>About the speaker :<br>Thomas LaMarre is a professor in the Department of East Asian Studies and the<br>Department of Art History and Communications Studies, McGill University.<br>Research interests include Japanese literature, comparative philosophy and<br>cultural theory, media and mass culture, and cultural and intellectual history.<br>Among his many publications are The Anime Machine: A Media Theory of Animation<br>(2009), Shadows on the Screen: Tanizaki Jun'ichir on Cinema and Oriental<br>Aesthetics (2005), and Uncovering Heian Japan: An Archaeology of Sensation and<br>Inscription
(2000).<br><br><br></pre></blockquote></td></tr></table>