Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The Othered Animation: Mari Okada’s Unlikely Ca...
View graph of relations

The Othered Animation: Mari Okada’s Unlikely Career and Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms (Okada, 2018)

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Published

Standard

The Othered Animation: Mari Okada’s Unlikely Career and Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms (Okada, 2018). / Crombie, Zoe.
2022. Paper presented at International Conference on Film Studies, London, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Harvard

Crombie, Z 2022, 'The Othered Animation: Mari Okada’s Unlikely Career and Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms (Okada, 2018)', Paper presented at International Conference on Film Studies, London, United Kingdom, 5/02/22 - 6/02/22.

APA

Crombie, Z. (2022). The Othered Animation: Mari Okada’s Unlikely Career and Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms (Okada, 2018). Paper presented at International Conference on Film Studies, London, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Crombie Z. The Othered Animation: Mari Okada’s Unlikely Career and Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms (Okada, 2018). 2022. Paper presented at International Conference on Film Studies, London, United Kingdom.

Author

Crombie, Zoe. / The Othered Animation: Mari Okada’s Unlikely Career and Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms (Okada, 2018). Paper presented at International Conference on Film Studies, London, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{61f6132369f2412fb98346ded136e46e,
title = "The Othered Animation: Mari Okada{\textquoteright}s Unlikely Career and Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms (Okada, 2018)",
abstract = "This paper challenges the notion that anime is a monolithic mode of cinema by analysing the career and work of the often overlooked screenwriter and director Mari Okada. The paper begins by looking at her status as an {\textquoteleft}other{\textquoteright} in Japanese society as a female hikikomori (someone who withdraws entirely from society), before moving onto her early {\textquoteleft}low culture{\textquoteright} work writing pornography scenarios and television episodes. From these beginnings, she has become one of anime{\textquoteright}s exceedingly few female {\textquoteleft}auteur{\textquoteright} figures. My primary case study, her feature directorial debut Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms, demonstrates both a commitment to depicting the experiences of young women through a personal lens, and the use of Europe as an otherworldly setting from a Japanese perspective. The latter is a common trope in anime that further twists the notion of what the {\textquoteleft}other{\textquoteright} means from different perspectives, especially in the context of Orientalism, and gives another layer of {\textquoteleft}otherness{\textquoteright} to Okada{\textquoteright}s work. By investigating Okada{\textquoteright}s career and interrogating what it means to be an anime {\textquoteleft}auteur{\textquoteright}, this paper seeks to deconstruct both the prototypical figure of the auteur filmmaker as a white Western man who begins in a {\textquoteleft}high{\textquoteright} cultural context, and the treatment of anime as a monolithic mode with few acknowledged individual creators.",
author = "Zoe Crombie",
year = "2022",
month = feb,
day = "6",
language = "English",
note = "International Conference on Film Studies : Identity and Otherness in Film ; Conference date: 05-02-2022 Through 06-02-2022",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - The Othered Animation: Mari Okada’s Unlikely Career and Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms (Okada, 2018)

AU - Crombie, Zoe

PY - 2022/2/6

Y1 - 2022/2/6

N2 - This paper challenges the notion that anime is a monolithic mode of cinema by analysing the career and work of the often overlooked screenwriter and director Mari Okada. The paper begins by looking at her status as an ‘other’ in Japanese society as a female hikikomori (someone who withdraws entirely from society), before moving onto her early ‘low culture’ work writing pornography scenarios and television episodes. From these beginnings, she has become one of anime’s exceedingly few female ‘auteur’ figures. My primary case study, her feature directorial debut Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms, demonstrates both a commitment to depicting the experiences of young women through a personal lens, and the use of Europe as an otherworldly setting from a Japanese perspective. The latter is a common trope in anime that further twists the notion of what the ‘other’ means from different perspectives, especially in the context of Orientalism, and gives another layer of ‘otherness’ to Okada’s work. By investigating Okada’s career and interrogating what it means to be an anime ‘auteur’, this paper seeks to deconstruct both the prototypical figure of the auteur filmmaker as a white Western man who begins in a ‘high’ cultural context, and the treatment of anime as a monolithic mode with few acknowledged individual creators.

AB - This paper challenges the notion that anime is a monolithic mode of cinema by analysing the career and work of the often overlooked screenwriter and director Mari Okada. The paper begins by looking at her status as an ‘other’ in Japanese society as a female hikikomori (someone who withdraws entirely from society), before moving onto her early ‘low culture’ work writing pornography scenarios and television episodes. From these beginnings, she has become one of anime’s exceedingly few female ‘auteur’ figures. My primary case study, her feature directorial debut Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms, demonstrates both a commitment to depicting the experiences of young women through a personal lens, and the use of Europe as an otherworldly setting from a Japanese perspective. The latter is a common trope in anime that further twists the notion of what the ‘other’ means from different perspectives, especially in the context of Orientalism, and gives another layer of ‘otherness’ to Okada’s work. By investigating Okada’s career and interrogating what it means to be an anime ‘auteur’, this paper seeks to deconstruct both the prototypical figure of the auteur filmmaker as a white Western man who begins in a ‘high’ cultural context, and the treatment of anime as a monolithic mode with few acknowledged individual creators.

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - International Conference on Film Studies

Y2 - 5 February 2022 through 6 February 2022

ER -