Abstract
Nationalism is a prominent theme in China’s cultural productions. While many studies research nationalistic representations of wars, revolutions and nation-building processes in Chinese socialist cinema and dramas, this article focuses on a marginal media form: political animations. It examines the patriotic discourses in popular Chinese animated series Year Hare Affair and presents three main findings. First, that the series characters represent personified/ani- malized nation states, reflecting the animator’s perceptions of ‘self’ and ‘other’ (and ‘friends’ or ‘enemies’), which are highly consistent with the Chinese authority’s stance and policy in foreign affairs. Second, that the animation’s key theme of ‘dreams of being a powerful nation’ explicitly demonstrates nationalist and develop- mental connotations, showing confirmation and resonation of Xi’s China Dream initiative. Third, that the animation also moderately deviates from the mainstream representations and offers re- interpretations of the official patriotic narratives with regard to China’s performance in international affairs. The analyses conclude a negotiation dynamic between the (half-) independent political animation and the state’s hegemony in China’s transformative political communication space.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Journal | Continuum |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2020 |
Keywords
- Political animation
- China
- nationalism
- narrative analyses