Les acteurs de l’anime: construire une individualité par la performance en animation (“Anime’s Actors: Constituting “Self-hood” through Performance in Animation” translated into French by Marie Pruvost-Delaspre)

Link to book: “Les acteurs de l’anime: construire une individualité par la performance en animation” (“Anime’s Actors: Constituting “Self-hood” through Performance in Animation” translated into French by Marie Pruvost-Delaspre) in La qualité du cinéma d’animation en question,entre économie et esthétique Full Animation vs. Limited Animation? Edited by Sébastien Denis, Lucie Merijeau, Marie Pruvost-Delaspre, Sébastien Roffat (L’Harmattan: Paris, 2023)

If animation allows us to envision a world of active objects through animating their movement, then surely how the objects are made to move through the animation changes how they are constituted as actors. In other words, how bodies move in animation, human and object alike, also entails certain conceptions of ” self ” as it is constituted through the dynamics of its animation. This study aims to (re) consider Donald Crafton’s conceptualization of animation performance forms (embodied and figurative performance), specifically in relation to Japanese anime. In embodied acting, the expression of character is produced through distinctive movements, where characters are constituted as individuals, each with their own discrete inside and outside. Figurative acting, on the other hand, utilizes various gestures and codified expressions. Due to this reliance on codified expressions, figurative performances build from previous ones, replaying and reiterating them in different contexts. Each of these forms enacts a different conception of selfhood: embodied acting performing the modern conception of individualism bound to the singular body on the object which performs the movement; figurative acting performing a type of “particularity” entailing a different conception of the strict internal/external borders of ” individuality, ” where the self is a composite configured through the citation of codes. Figurative performance thus facilitates an aesthetic well attuned to the contemporary performance of self under the conditions of neoliberalism, selecting from a vast array of options, jerkily moved from one product and expression to another.

Original Japanese version published in Animēshon Kenkyū, 19, no. 1 (2017): 3–15, English version.