Forum - View topichave you ever learned from anime?
|
Goto page 1, 2 Next |
| Author | Message | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
the Rancorous
Posts: 2249 Location: Sac, Ca USA |
||||||
|
Now, I am NOT talking about life lessons or what not at all. I am talking about actual hostorical things, or science-related things, etc that you learned from seeing in an anime.
For example, in one of my history classes, the instructor started going over the "basic-run-down" of japanese history and started going through the whole Tokugawa Shogun and whatnot, and I realized that through both Samurai Champloo and Ninja Scroll I knew the basic run-downs of this period, and had to chuckle to myself during this lecture. Another one was in one of my theatre classes. We had to read plays and analyze them for content, context, etc. We had to look up key things that characters of said plays brought up and whatnot. In one of these plays, How I learned to Drive one of the characters mentioned The Rape of the Saybean Woman in an argument they had with another character, and as soon as I read that I laughed since I had learned about the Rape of the Saybean Woman from Gunslinger Girl episode 7, When Jean and Rico go to Florence to protect the guy that happened to be a student of the arts. So, any similar experiences with the rest of you? |
||||||
|
outlawwolf
Posts: 645 |
||||||
|
I know I've had a similar experience where sudden historical knowledge from Rurouni Kenshin actually helped me get an answer correct in a Global History test I once had. Just a random thing that I remembered but I'll be damned if I can pick it out. Other than random japanese words and slang and that one incident, I can't really say I have.
|
||||||
|
DaZ616
Posts: 327 Location: Sydney, Australia |
||||||
|
I haven't learnt anything historical or anything like that from anime, but watching Initial D kinda gives me an idea on how to race and drift
Aside from that, watching anime in the modern world gives me an idea of what japanese culture is like in japan. etc etc. Im some anime, the fansubs sometime gives us, the viewers a sidenote on what the characters are talking about or referencing. This teaches me a few things that may come in handy in the future, for example, when i go to japan, ill know what to do and what not to do. -DaZ |
||||||
|
abunai
Old Regular
Posts: 5463 Location: 露命 |
||||||
While I appreciate the point you're trying to make, I must point out that trusting these two sources, in particular, for any historical data, is not exactly the smartest thing to do. But yes, I suppose they can provide a bare minimum of insight into the period.
*wince* You mean the Rape of the Sabine women. It's a much-used classical theme, from Plutarch's Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans. It was very popular in olden days, when the classical origin served as a plausible excuse for presenting a "racy" scene in art.
- abunai |
||||||
|
DaZ616
Posts: 327 Location: Sydney, Australia |
||||||
|
From watching "The Prince of Tennis", i also learnt a few more rules to the game of tennis, which i didn't know about before. I also learnt about the different types of gameplay and strategies that can happen in the game of tennis. The series also taught me about the different type of shots played in tennis, such as "the rising shot", " the "twist serve". Heck, i've even tried doing the twist serve.
So Thanks to "The Prince Of Tennis" i know alot more about the game of tennis. -DaZ |
||||||
|
Mercury Crusader
Posts: 67 |
||||||
|
I learned how to construct sentences in Japanese a lot easier. Grammar was always the hardest part of learning the language for me, because I still find it confusing to have the verbs at the end of my sentences like that (same reason I never picked up Tagalog, and I'm half-Filipino
|
||||||
|
Quadraxis
Posts: 54 Location: Holland |
||||||
|
I've learned a lot about bread from Yakitate!! Japan
Although learning me about bread isn't that hard to do, since I didn't know anything about making it in the first place |
||||||
|
Mylene
Posts: 2792 Location: Indiana |
||||||
|
As a tennis player/fan, I couldn't stand most of the tennis shown in Prince of Tennis. However, they did at least get the scoring right, that lines are in, a few basics, so I suppose one could learn from that. Even without liking all the overly stylized tennis, I do have hope that it might lead to a few more Japanese men in the professional tennis world (there are a great deal of women, like Sugiyama Ai, Morigami Akiko, Fujiwara, Asagoe Shinobu, Nakamura, etc, but the highest ranked man is Suzuki and he's nowhere near the top 100, if I'm remembering correctly from the last time I looked through the rankings), and if it goes well in America, perhaps encourage a few new players in the US as well. (And players/fans wherever the show is aired.)
Anyway. I've learned a bit about the very basic basics of the Tanabata festival from watching several shows around the same time that all decided to have a Tanabata episode--.hack//Legend of the Twilight, Suzumiya Haruhi no Yuuutsu, and even last night it was mentioned in an episode of Piano. Not a whole lot, but enough that I can watch a show that doesn't literally explain what it's talking about, and still somewhat understand what's going on. Azumanga Daioh (with translation notes) was a nice way to learn about the existence of certain myths, monsters, and traditions. I can't think of anything specifically I learned from the show, but I know it sparked my interest in a few topics that I need to get around to reading about soon. Oh, and the Bubblegum Crisis extras have taught me that while the late 80s were a bad time for fashion in the US, it was a worse time for fashion in Japan. ^_- |
||||||
undeadben
![]() Posts: 1212 Location: West Texas |
||||||
|
I don't think I've ever really learned from anime directly, but there are a few anime that have made me look things up that seemed somewhat interesting. Ususally info in anime is only loosely based on something factual and sometimes it is interesting to learn where it comes from.
For instance, very recently from watching Fushigi Yuugi I did some searches and discovered some things about Chinese constellations and looked up some of the more interesting things. It was just interesting to learn how the astronomy differed from (western) astronomy here. Years ago I had done research for some papers on vampires and Vlad the Impaler and after reading a thread here a couple of months ago about Hellsing I went back to review some of the Vlad and Dracula legends. Hellsing is not remotely close to any existing vampire legends, but some things in the anime are interesting, like that Hellsing's creator said that Alucard is 567 years old; counting back from when the series aired, 1999, this would put his birthday in the same year as Vlad the Impaler. After seeing several anime stories centered around Tanabata, I also wanted to look into it and ended up learning a lot about not only Tanabata but several other very unique clebretations or holidays in Japan, some that I have also seen mentioned in other anime. So while I can't say I have learned anything from anime directly, except that it is very entertaining, sometimes I do get something in my head from an anime episode or series and indirectly it does sometimes take me on some very interesting searches where I do learn something. |
||||||
|
ShinobiX
Posts: 889 Location: NY |
||||||
|
I learned jack from anime since it's all fake, but if this counts as learning something, I learned religion jokes from Ghost Stories.
|
||||||
Tony K.
SubscriberModerator Posts: 12081 Location: Frisco, TX |
||||||
Right... so something like WWII in Zipang is all fake, gotcha' I've learned a number of cultural facts from watching Azumanga Daioh, Kare Kano, and School Rumble (all taking place in high school, coincidentally). And I've learned a lot of interesting food/bread/cultural factoids from Yakitate!! Japan. I saw and heard about all kinds of different breads that I knew nothing about or even existed (makes me kind of hungry now that I think about it ).
I also learned a little bit of Japanese history through various Bakumatsu/Meiji era titles and a little of European history through Monster, though it was hard to tell with all of those Johan/511 Kinderheim references in between. And on the Juubei-chan 2 DVDs, I learned a little about kenjutsu and tea ceremony (the actual processes of doing them; and Horie Yui looks cute in a kimono by the way |
||||||
|
the Rancorous
Posts: 2249 Location: Sac, Ca USA |
||||||
Basic run-downs as in terms, names, who was in power, but beleive me I know not to rely on much accuracy from those 2 peices, but all the terms and power-structure that the instructor went over were already familiar to me because of those 2 animes. |
||||||
|
Deltakiral
Posts: 3338 Location: Glendora, CA (Avatar Hei from Darker than BLACK) |
||||||
Ding! That right I was alive when the wall came down but to young to be able to grasp the important at the time. And so I didn't know all the little things about how dangerous the trip from east to the west was. Not only that I don't think about how different Germany/Czech countries were before the wall, it's easy to forget something specially when your an entire ocean away. You learn things in history but often times you don't absorbed the information, certain people just learn better from different mediums. Till next time, Delta Kiral |
||||||
|
caseclosedfan414
Posts: 264 Location: Missing In Action |
||||||
|
I, like you, learned a little bit about Japan's history from Samurai Champloo, but like it's been said, it's not a very trustworthy source.
I also remember learning about how things work in an animation studio from an episode of Paranoia Agent. It taught me a lot about some of the different positions there and the different things that need to be done to make an anime. Not to mention, how they do them. And, I don't know what catergory this would fall under (life lesson or straight-up fact), but Fullmetal Alchemist opened my eyes to the whole Equivilent Exchange thing. I mean, I know they were talking about alchemy, which isn't real, but come to think of it, it does apply to normal, every-day life. It's real, and FMA made me realize that, after thinking about it enough. |
||||||
|
bluepita
Posts: 465 |
||||||
|
Other than random bits of Japanese culture, I'd have to say learning the meaning of drift from Initial D has been the sole piece of real knowledge I have picked up. And before you laugh, you wouldn't believe how this has come in handy.
|
||||||
| All times are GMT - 5 Hours |
||
|
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group

Subscriber
).
