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Klausner, Sebastian. "Ōtomo’s Exploding Cities: The Intersection of Class and City in Ōtomo Katsuhiro’s Works Before, During, and After the Bubble Economy in Japan." Writing Visual Culture 6 2015. Accessed 29Apr. 2016. <http://www.herts.ac.uk/ ... 7/WVC_TC_7_Klausner.pdf>. 
Added by: joachim (4/29/16, 11:01 PM)   Last edited by: joachim (9/28/16, 12:58 AM)
Resource type: Web Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
BibTeX citation key: Klausner2015
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Akira", "Dōmu", "Metropolis", City, Japan, Manga, Ōtomo. Katsuhiro, Science Fiction, Space
Creators: Klausner
Collection: Writing Visual Culture
Views: 26/1217
Attachments   URLs   http://www.herts.a ... _TC_7_Klausner.pdf
Abstract
In one of Ōtomo Katsuhiro’s interviews held during the sponsoring events for Metropolis (2001) he stated that, characters aside, the city itself was a driving force behind his initial concept. Ōtomo wanted a city that felt “alive” on the one hand, but that he could gleefully “completely destroy” on the other. Although the artist is neither a stranger to “exploding cities” in a figurative (i. e. exploding population) nor in a literal sense, the ways he imagined his cityscapes changed bit by bit. Considering the essential position held by the apocalyptic idea as a key-image in both political and pop-cultural discourse during the Lost Decades, as the years following the burst of the bubble economy are known, Ōtomo’s works open up the possibility to examine how the image of urban landscape and its destruction are interconnected with the discourse of class (or with its vanishing and re-emerging) in Japan during the 1980s and 1990s. By looking at Dōmu (1980–1981), Akira (1982–1990; 1988), and Metropolis, one can not only approach the image of the (exploding) city and its possible change over time, but also the shift in discussion of class in the once called “classless society”.
  
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