For the last several decades, animated films and television series produced in Japan have captured the imaginations of global audiences. As exemplified by Studio Ghibli’s box office smashes (Princess Mononoke, Spirited Away), Shinkai Makoto’s recent string of equally record-setting works (Your Name, Weathering with You, Suzume) and influential new series like Demon Slayer, some of the most internationally popular anime include recognizably “religious” content such as deities, spirits, shrines, and temples. But finding religion in anime is too easy. This talk instead focuses on the religion of anime, showing how key aspects of the animation medium can help us construct a generalizable theory of religion that applies far beyond the Japanese case.
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              Earlier Event: October 17
          Didactic Constitutionalism: Education Reform, Religion, and the Japanese Constitution
        Later Event: November 12
          The Religion of Anime