Contributing writer for The Artifice.
Junior Contributor I
Analysis of characters in BoJack Horseman.BoJack Horseman is a well known Netflix show that gained a lot of popularity. I think many people know it for sure. I am thinking of doing character analysis about some characters in this show for my first try for an article. So, I have some occurring thoughts about it. The main character in the series is BoJack. He is a very complicated personality that has psychological issues, hidden and unspoken traumas. However, he is also a horse, not a human. That is a really important point – the character represents the human trauma and human personality traits but has a form of an animal. Since I am interested in Animal Studies, this occurs to be a very significant point from a psychological point of view. The viewers can identify with BoJack, however, a certain distance will still remain between the character and viewers because of the character's physical appearance. BoJack feels like a human suffers like a human, but yet is not the same as a human. Because of this reason, viewers that have similar problems to BoJack's can identify with him better than with a human character experiencing the same problems – the "psychological distance" makes BoJack like an imaginary friend of every viewer having traumatic experiences. BoJack becomes like a symbolical figure of human trauma but he still has horse traits and horse behaviour stereotypes. Actually, these traits are much harder to be than for example in other characters like Princess Carolyn or Mr.Peanutbutter.
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Animal studies and cartoons?I am interested in this topic. Maybe here there are already many articles and people focusing on that? Maybe several people that know good books, articles related to anthropomorphization?
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I think the book is always better than a movie. Sure, movies can be nicely made (like Harry Potter,imo), however, the book always gives you the possibility to create your own movie in your mind. In the movie you can see the view of the book of its producers while you as a reader might see something else. | Harry Potter: Books vs. Movies |
Interesting article. I think anime is a pretty good tool for feminist and gender studies. Also you can see what kind of stereotypes of women are represented in anime/manga | Can Manga and Anime Contribute to Feminism and Gender Studies? |
Funny and ironical, but oral “texts” are much older than the written ones. And since they go from one human to another, they are remembered for a longer time.