SGMS 2011 Call for Papers! - 0 views
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"Ten years ago, the first SGMS had to be delayed because of the tragic event of 9/11, but two months later, seven academics from a variety of disciplines spoke on manga and anime to a crowd of 150 eager fans, academics, and students from junior high to college-aged. Since then, on the last weekend of every September, the expanding community of SGMS artists, actors, teachers, and students have gotten together to celebrate manga, anime and Japanese popular culture. Join us for the SGMS Masquerade Bash on Friday night with the Full Fashion Panic Fashion Show, music, food and costumed frivolities will prevail! Even the guests will be in costume! On Saturday and Sunday, there will be talks by guests Marc Hairston, Crispin Freeman, Thomas LaMarre, Christopher Bolton, Gilles Poitras and Frenchy Lunning. Classes in manga creation by Robert Ten Pas and Dennis Lo, Lolita Fashion creation by Samantha Rei, and more will be held. Watch for the announcement of our VERY SPECIAL GUEST soon!"
まんが『サザエさん』に見る食の近代化 - 0 views
雁屋哲「江藤淳批判」漫画の薄っぺら--「美味しんぼ」原作者の迷走 - 0 views
漫画に登場するユニ-ク料理を提供--村さ来「クッキングパパグルメフェア」 - 0 views
Japan's Gross National Cool, By Douglas McGray - 0 views
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Japan is reinventing superpower—again. Instead of collapsing beneath its widely reported political and economic misfortunes, Japan’s global cultural influence has quietly grown. From pop music to consumer electronics, architecture to fashion, and animation to cuisine, Japan looks more like a cultural superpower today than it did in the 1980s, when it was an economic one. But can Japan build on its mastery of medium to project an equally powerful national message?
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But cultural accuracy is not the point. Less important than authentic American origin is the whiff of American cool.
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Yet Japan is reinventing superpower again. Instead of collapsing beneath its political and economic misfortunes, Japan’s global cultural influence has only grown. In fact, from pop music to consumer electronics, architecture to fashion, and food to art, Japan has far greater cultural influence now than it did in the 1980s, when it was an economic superpower.
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Face fault - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views
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face fault
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meanings may differ depending on the usage by the artist or studio responsible for a work.
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Facefault (spelled as one word): A character falling over (usually flat on their face or back, sometimes with their legs sticking up in the air as the only part of them visible on-screen) with a loud thud or crash from another character saying something anticlimactic or stupid.
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Industry urged to utilize 'Japan cool' : DY Weekend : Features : DAILY YOMIURI ONLINE (... - 0 views
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Japanese pop culture, such as fashion, manga and anime, has been considered "cool" overseas for a while, but the government and domestic business community are not making the most of such popularity.
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The Economy, Trade and Industry Minister' Industrial Structure Council recently released a report that devoted a great deal of space to the Japan cool issue. Following is an extract from the report.
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It has been 10 years since Japan cool became popular, but Japanese industry is not doing a good job of making the most of it, as it is often mocked: The biggest gainer from Japanese anime is Hollywood.
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Call for papers: PopCAANZ: The Popular Culture Association of Australia and New Zealand - 0 views
POPCAANZ 2nd Annual International Conference June 29-July 1, 2011 | The Langham Hotel, Auckland, New Zealand Call for Papers - deadline for submissions: January 30, 2011 The Popular Culture Assoc...
よしながふみのマンガに見るとジェンダー(センター主催公開講演会) - 1 views
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