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Chinese animation : ウィキペディア英語版
Chinese animation

Chinese animation〔.〕 or Manhua Anime, in narrow sense, refers to animation made in China.
== History ==
(詳細はDing Huan (丁緩) invented a device "on which many strange birds and mysterious animals were attached" that were said to have "moved quite naturally", but it is unclear if this and the other devices historian Joseph Needham calls "a variety of zoetrope" involved any true illusion of animation or simply featured static or mechanized figures actually moving through space.〔Needham, Joseph (1962). ''Science and Civilization in China'', vol. IV, part 1: ''Physics and Physical Technology''. Cambridge University Press. p. 123-124.〕
Modern animation in China began in 1918 when an animation piece from the United States titled ''Out of the Inkwell'' landed in Shanghai. Cartoon clips were first used in advertisements for domestic products. Though the animation industry did not begin until the arrival of the Wan brothers in 1926. The Wan brothers produced the first Chinese animated film with sound, ''The Camel's Dance'', in 1935. The first animated film of notable length was ''Princess Iron Fan'' in 1941. ''Princess Iron Fan'' was the first animated feature film in Asia and it had great impact on wartime Japanese Momotaro animated feature films and later on Tezuka Osamu. China was relatively on pace with the rest of the world up to the mid-1960s, with the Wan's brothers ''Havoc in Heaven'' earning numerous international awards.
China's golden age of animation would come to an end following the onset of the Cultural Revolution in 1966.〔Qing Yun. "(Qing Yun )." ''Qing Yun.com.'' Retrieved on 19 December 2006.〕 Many animators were forced to quit. If not for harsh economic conditions, the mistreatment of the Red Guards would threaten their work. The surviving animations would lean closer to propaganda. By the 1980s, Japan would emerge as the animation powerhouse of the Far East, leaving China's industry far behind in reputation and productivity. Though two major changes would occur in the 1990s, igniting some of the biggest changes since the exploration periods. The first is a political change. The implementation of a socialist market economy would push out traditional planned economy systems.〔Socialist Marketing Economy. "(Socialist Marketing Economy )." "Socialist Marketing Economy." Retrieved on 20 December 2006.〕 No longer would a single entity limit the industry's output and income. The second is a technological change with the arrival of the Internet. New opportunities would emerge from flash animations and the contents became more open. Today China is drastically reinventing itself in the animation industry with greater influences from Hong Kong and Taiwan.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Chinese animation」の詳細全文を読む



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