The Japanese Anime - Representing Ecological Imbalance and The Samurai Culture
The Japanese Anime - Representing Ecological Imbalance and The Samurai Culture
The Japanese Anime - Representing Ecological Imbalance and The Samurai Culture
Samurai Culture
Sarika Goyal
The Japanese are considered brutal fighters but actually they have
developed defensive techniques rather than annihilating ones. The
horrors of the Second World War and the technological advancement
in its aftermath further prove that Japan is a country of fighters fighting
against oppressive forces—natural, human, beastly or technologically
driven and Japanese anime is no exception to it. The anime has carved
a place in the World cinema for itself and the release of new feature
films is much awaited in the US as well. Whereas most of the super
specialized international animated movies are a part of science fiction
that play alarmingly with the speed where human cognizance almost
fails to elude the meaning of shots appearing at the pace of some
timemachine, the Japanese anime is more humane and serves as a
platform to prepare children to fight against evil forces bent upon
destroying human existence and its harmony with nature and the
planet. Even the planet wars and the movement in the galaxy are aimed
to check appearance of destructive forces readying to bring about
catastrophic destruction for human race. The present paper seeks to
explore and analyze this ecological consciousness and the Samurai spirit
to fight against evil forces—natural or supernatural found in Japanese
people. The paper analyses some Japanese anime videos to serve its
purpose.
The major Japanese animes that have taken the whole world by fire are
Doraemon, Pokemon, Beyblade etc. where a cruel world, inhabited by
monsters not of bone and flesh but of other islands, planets and
celestial bodies possessing robotic forces, laden with hi-tech devices
and instruments, capable of genocide, impregnable to human emotion
and misery, await a few young men whom I would prefer to call the
modern Samurai as they are ready to embrace death in the service of
others and the others, here, don’t make up any gender, class or creed
but the entire ecosystem, the planet and the galaxy.
Samurais were famous for the tea ceremonies and the brutal, slow act
of committing suicide using their own swords. The crude act of killing
was celebrated as a great sacrifice. ‘When he uses a sword, he makes it
serve to give life to others’ (Samurai Archives).
Samurais were ready to face dangers in alien lands under strange rulers
and amid their cruel inhuman laws and evil forces capable of exercising
black magic and sorcery and could face death. As per the archives,
‘Every aspect of Japanese life was tailored to suit an existence in a land
that could be shockingly and suddenly cruel. Earthquakes could topple
castles, and plagues ravage the countryside. Raging fires often swept
towns, leading Chomei to write, ‘all of man’s doings are senseless/ but
spending his wealth/ and tormenting himself/ to build a house in this
hazardous city/is especially foolish”.
Not only Doraemon but other animes and mangas also support
Japanese ecological consciousness and Samurai culture like the
animations of Hayao Miyazaki. ‘Miyazaki’s films often contain recurrent
themes like humanity’s relationship with nature and technology and
the difficulty of maintaining a peaceful ethic’ (Wikipedia). The difficulty
for the global forces to maintain a peaceful order can be better
understood if we read Marx. The global forces fighting for command in
terms of technology, development and economic gains are the
bourgeoisie against who are pitted the conservative societies, the
ecosystems, the flora and fauna of the planet and the outer space. The
greed of man has spared none and thwarted and threatened their
peaceful and harmonious existence. The world of kids is no exception.
In their dreams and fantasies, they imagine, supernatural, advanced
bourgeoisie forces snatching their little world of gaming with friends,
pets and family members in a way forcing them to combat the sinister
designs of monstrous forms.
Marx in the first chapter of his manifesto states that ‘the need of a
constantly expanding market for its products chases the bourgeoisie
over the entire surface of the globe. It must nestle everywhere, settle
everywhere, establish connections everywhere’ even by drawing the
most barbarian into civilization. The robots created by the human
scientists to explore outer space, to bring about mass production of
some products, to transform the barren (in terms of money) land of our
planet and the space into big industrial houses churning out huge
profits, have adopted the capitalist attitude like the bourgeoisie in
Doraemon and are bent upon to reduce human beings to working
hands for them. The master control lies with the machine, superior in
thinking and performing operations and immune to emotions.
With the advent of star wars, we again face the Marxian reality. ‘All
that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned, and man is at last
compelled to face with sober senses his real conditions of life and his
relations with his kind’. But with Japanese anime the reality is not that
sordid. The world is threatened by uncertainty, agitation and lure of
hegemony by the technologically advanced, but the real hero, the
samurai will emerge assisted by the nobility of the heart to defeat
them.
Miyazaki also works on some other themes like fascination and anti-
military streak besides developing ecological concerns. Unlike other
Japanese animes where Nobita, Ben, Kai, Tyson, Ash and their pets or
friends like Pikachu and Doraemon rule the screen, his movies have
heroines struggling against the evil forces. ‘In an interview with the
New Yorker, Margaret Talbot stated that Miyazaki believes much of
modern culture is thin and shallow and fake and he not entirely jokingly
looked forward to a time when Tokyo is submerged by the ocean and
the NTV tower becomes an island when the human population
plummets and there are no more high-rises’ (Wikipedia). But
interestingly the Rashomon type savagery of Akira Kurosawa is missing
in most of the modern animes. The jarring music, incessant rain, horror
on the faces of the men, patternless narrative and disconnected strands
are the part of technique used by Kurosawa to enhance the savage
effect.
The Japanese colourful graphics with potent and vibrant characters and
robust themes as they are popularly called animes have pierced the
entertainment industry over the globe. The work of Osamu Tezuka is
particularly famous for shaping the robot genre and the modern cat
robot Doraemon is every child’s heartthrob.
It is worth mentioning here that surreal art has added a great deal to
these colourful graphics. In American Visual Graphic narratives that are
close to science fiction, ‘the bourgeoisie has drowned the most
heavenly ecstasies of religious fervor, of chivalrous enthusiasm, of
philistine sentimentalism, in the icy water of egotistical calculation’
(Communist Manifesto). The bourgeoisie are the American production
houses engaged in producing cinema. The Japanese employ surreal
images and like Salvador Dali pave the way for mixing the world of
dreams and fantasy with the real world (Victoria estrepo). The
surrealist images, here, ‘don’t offer ways to undermine the dominance
of vision, to explore the absurdities of representation, to reach the
point of death in language, and to listen to the screams of the body in
Foucauldian sense’ (Carrette, 49).
Works Cited