Takashi Takeuchi Essays

  • Kinoko Nasu's Fate/Stay Night

    716 Words  | 2 Pages

    “An ideal is only an ideal after all. As long as you embrace that ideal, the friction with reality will continue to increase. So you will someday face reality and will have to pay the price for your compromise.” So began my foray into a fantasy novel about legendary, historical figures coming to the future and fighting with magicians in Japan that wound up making me think about my life more than any specific leadership book. Fate/Stay Night, written in early 2004, was quickly picked and translated

  • An Exploration through Shojo and Shonen Manga through Sailor Moon and Black Cat

    1447 Words  | 3 Pages

    incorporated into it. Aaron, good job. I thought that a lot of your discussion was interesting, though I agree with Gen that there were some issues, especially the lack of original research, To which I’d add that you didn’t. Works Cited Takeuchi Naoko, Sailor Moon I, Tokyopop: 1998, pp3-119. Kentaro Yabuki, Black Cat, Shueisha: 2000-2004

  • Grimes: Appropriation as Fetish

    947 Words  | 2 Pages

    Grimes in her video Genesis reinforces archetypes shown in the popular television show “Sailor Moon” which has often been labeled as Japanese culture using ideology. In the video, Grimes simply appropriates these images without challenging them and in the process spins a problematic take in the music video Claire Boucher also known as Grimes is a female singer. She is a white Canadian woman who had her upbringing primarily in Vancouver before moving to Quebec for her undergraduate diploma at McGill

  • J-Horror: An Expression of Change in Japanese Culture and Tradition

    1851 Words  | 4 Pages

    Horror movies have become a staple in the movie industry. In theaters worldwide, but primarily Hollywood, the women of horror are often portrayed as the damsel in distress, usually lacking independence and often victimized. This portrayal of women in horror is not internationally acknowledged. Japanese horror (aka J-Horror) has gone to great lengths to make the wrath of the female feared amongst all audiences. As a country known for its “slow progressing cultural movements” (McRoy 54), Japan has

  • Life Of An Artifact Analysis

    1685 Words  | 4 Pages

    the center. The character Mr. DOB’s full name is Bobozite, and it represents the image of Doraemon, a cat-like robot character from an anime series. The painting possesses a life-cycle that makes up the continuity or regeneration of the artifact (Takashi Murakami's 727). The painting was inspired by the anime (animated film) and manga (comic book) characters that have achieved cult status in Japanese youth culture, but also the mixed culture between American and Japanese art style. In the painting

  • Rashomon Comparison

    1796 Words  | 4 Pages

    In Akira Kurosawa’s film “Sanshiro Sugata” (1943) it follows a young man who wants to learn the ways of Judo, but instead he goes on to learn more about himself. Even though this film had scenes that were taken away from it, because of the censorship the government placed on cinema during that wartime in japan. It shows what ability Kurosawa had in telling a story in way that would make audience think. There are five major fight sequences in this that repentant the traces of the moral growth of the

  • Analysis of Rashomon

    1088 Words  | 3 Pages

    is reality? Today, any consumer of television or cinema has seen various permutations of the plot of Rashomon numerous times, probably without realizing. In the film, a rape and consequent murder are told five different times, by a woodcutter (Takashi Shimura) who seems to have witnessed the event, a bandit (Toshiro Mifune) who committed the rape, the wife of a samurai (Machiko Kyo) who was raped, and the ghost of the samurai (Masayuki Mori), who is channeled by a medium after his murder. In each

  • Takashi Murakami Research Paper

    1006 Words  | 3 Pages

    Takashi Murakami was born on February 1, 1962 in Tokyo, Japan. He is a Japanese contemporary artist that is “… known for disseminating and promoting pop art strategies in ways unforeseen by American critics and artists” (The Board). Also, Murakami got accepted to Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music with the plan of becoming a successful animator but instead he majored in Nihonga (Widewall Takashi). Murakami blended fine art and Japanese anime to created “Superflat” which caught the eye