Kawaiikneko wrote:Anime sparked an interest in Japanese culture for me, but honestly I'd never want to go live there or anything because of how they treat foreigners and... well, just the general way the country thinks.
Kawaiikneko wrote:And they have gelato which is the best ice cream in the WORLD.
RineyX21 wrote:Hmm... I was thinking about this while reflecting my time as an anime fan: Do you guys think anime has an almost subtle way of "jump starting" an interest in the Japanese culture?
Since I guess most of you here began watching anime with some or little knowledge of the culture, it's probably safe to say that you would have more of a glimpse of it through anime itself.
I guess for me, I never really thought I'd learn so much about the country when I started becoming an anime fan - it was more or less watching anime without attempting to understand the culture. My continued watching of anime had eventually led me to start eating Japanese food, listening to J-Pop, or learning tidbits of the language. It's almost as if anime and Japan had grown on me!
Though while it's true that anime doesn't exactly define the culture as a whole, certain areas within anime/manga were able to help me get a better understanding of Japan and their society.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:First off. MAD PROPS TO YOU! Good choice for an avatar. Are you a Urasawa Naoki fan? And have you seen/read Monster?
RineyX21 wrote:Haha, thanks. Actually Master Keaton is the only series I've seen by him, but I've been very tempted to check out Monster after having seeing Naoki's work in MK (as different as both of the series are).
Kaligraphic wrote:Gelato is not ice cream. Or so says an Italian guy who owns a gelateria.
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