詳細検索結果
以下の条件での結果を表示する: 検索条件を変更
クエリ検索: "SF考証"
2件中 1-2の結果を表示しています
  • 高島 雄哉, 大澤 博隆, 聞き手:三宅 陽一郎
    人工知能
    2019年 34 巻 5 号 749-754
    発行日: 2019/09/01
    公開日: 2020/09/29
    解説誌・一般情報誌 フリー
  • 1970~80 年代のアニメ産業を事例として
    永田 大輔, 松永 伸太朗
    マス・コミュニケーション研究
    2019年 95 巻 183-201
    発行日: 2019/07/31
    公開日: 2019/10/25
    ジャーナル フリー

    In the 1970s and 1980s, the animation industry in Japan saw the emergence

    of distinctive consumers, called “anime fans.” This brought quantitative and

    qualitative changes in products in the animation market. The aim of this paper

    is to reveal how animators dealt with this change and how they reformed their

    working culture. The authors have shown that the working culture underpinned

    market movements in the 1970s and 1980s.

      Historically, animators preferred working as freelancers on a piece-rate

    system rather than as regular workers on a fixed salary. This was due to their

    meritocratic occupational norm. However, the number of animation programs

    increased during the anime-boom period, and animators were forced to cooperate

    with a much broader workforce to produce many programs suitable for the

    diverse demands of fans. This limited animators’ discretion. In this study, the

    authors wanted to understand how it was possible for the animation industry to

    continue supplying the workforce necessary to adapt to market changes during

    this time.

      For this purpose, the authors analyzed texts in animation magazines from

    the perspective of the labor process theory, which explains the relationship

    between workstyles and the transformation of markets. One of the key concepts

    of this approach is workers’ shared norms. The authors also employed

    ethnomethodology, which elicits vivid insights regarding such norms, to analyze

    round-table talks and interviews with animators working at animation magazines.

      While animators understood the quantitative expansion of the animation

    market as limiting their discretion, there was a disparity in how they coped

    with the situation. The older generation recognized their skills in detail and

    relied on networks built by longtime co-working. The younger generation

    accepted the new situation and found their occupational value in the new working

    environment through the occupational image of “the artisan.” This image

    reflected the new occupational competence and made the formation of peer

    communities of young animators possible. This industrial transformation sustained

    the supply of a broad workforce, which drew on various expressions during

    the anime-boom period.

feedback
Top