Kura Ookami wrote:The problem lies more with american comics than japanese ones in my opinion. In anime there's people of every shape and size, which of course is natural. In american comics i cant think of mny overweight people. And where are different races of people in american comics? I've seen more people of different ethnic minorities in anime than i have american comics. Anti-anime people are just that anti-anime. Hypocrites. They ignore that the same things could easily be said to descrive american cartoons.
In my experience most of the people in anime who are drawn in different sizes or racial groups tend to be drawn grotesquely for comedy purposes (and some of the racial groups are drawn in a way that could be considered racist). Of course, I have a preference for comedies, so perhaps it's not as bad in the more serious productions, though judging by the one's I've seen, it's also a problem there-- though not as extreme.
As for the "anti-anime" people, most of my experience with them (and unfortunately I have a lot) have been with issues over content that they see being aimed at minors. A lot of them don't like what they see in
American cartoons either for that reason.
The parents I know in this group don't like what they consider the selling of sex to minors. They're used to the old days of the Comics Code and have an idea that this is the norm for what comics and cartoons should be. Also, in the old days, porn was women showing bare breasts and the rest of the details were not allowed to be shown. I think that if someone grew up with those types of thinking, they're going to react to nudity in anime as if it were porn.
ANother contributing factor was probably that in the early days of the anime explosion, American distributors made some poor choices with their self-imposed ratings, giving a 13+ rating to anime with bare breasts even though the US audiences tends to look at nudity as something that needs the equivalent of an "R" rating
I think it's wrong of anti-anime people to give a blanket condemnation to everything based on the content of a small portion of the market, but unfortunately in the old VHS days, a lot of the content was the violence and nudity type and only relatively recently has the stuff aimed at a younger market come out.
I find it best that we use patient explanations (apologetics) similar to what we might use in dealing with someone who is anti-christian: Finding out the objections and explaining why they are mistaken, followed by showing what it IS. It may not work for some, but it's probably the best chance.