Contemporizing the National Style in Chinese Animation: The Case of Nezha (2019)
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-1-2021
Abstract
In this article, the authors explore the popular animation Nezha (2019), examining the idea that it typifies the ‘national style’. Expanding the work of other scholars who have demonstrated the changeability of the ‘national style’, here they examine this notion in regard to the way in which Nezha (2019) represents ‘Chineseness’ at this particular socio-political moment. Methodologically, they focus their analysis largely upon the film’s narrative and aesthetics, drawing on a number of reviews as counterpoints for the way in which it was interpreted to situate it in popular discourses. The authors argue that Nezha (2019) presents a national image in which traditions and modernity are interwoven, and the focus upon the ‘technological’ – its digitality – constitutes a refiguring of animation in China as symbolic of modernity. Narratively and aesthetically mediating between the past and the present, Nezha (2019) embodies a ‘national style’ which is on one hand hybrid in its inter/nationality, but also culturally delimited in terms of which cultural heritages are held up as emblematic of the nation.
Publication Title
Animation
First Page Number
157
Last Page Number
174
DOI
10.1177/17468477211049354
Recommended Citation
Whyke, Thomas William; Mugica, Joaquin Lopez; and Brown, Melissa Shani, "Contemporizing the National Style in Chinese Animation: The Case of Nezha (2019)" (2021). Kean Publications. 868.
https://digitalcommons.kean.edu/keanpublications/868