branchandroot: cherries (cherries)
Branch ([personal profile] branchandroot) wrote2011-02-01 11:49 am
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The adolescense of anime cons

Well, the world hasn't ended in ice, but we have a thick enough sheet that the university is closed and I don't have to go in. So instead let me talk about cons.

Anime cons seem to be at an awkward stage of development. It's a hard one to get past. But eventually it really does become necessary to give panels that are more than "this source/activity for beginners/newcomers". Anime cons, in general, have not made this leap, and I am getting bored out of my mind.


Maybe I was spoiled by sf cons, which were already a fairly mature form by the time I encountered them. There are always "squee about this" panels, but there were also "how does X real technology/lifestyle/practice relate to the fiction versions" and "politics/sociology of X corner of fan life" and "X theme through the years/sources". There was an assumption that we are collectively engaged in a lot of different forms of activity, so there were workshops and panels on fic and filk and costuming and organizing and art and acting. There was a wide variety of stuff to buy, little of it theme or costume related but much of it interesting in its own right. The art auctions featured solid, professional work alongside the beginners.

Anime cons have almost none of this, at least the Midwest ones. If you're lucky, you might find three panels out of sixty that are taking even a mildly thoughtful look at what we're reading/watching/doing; everything else is unstructured intro-level information. What fic track there used to be has fallen badly by the wayside, vidding also. The only form of creativity that gets much time any more is costuming. There is a rising "cultural" track, but I don't generally consider that a credit because some white chick who maybe visited Japan once or twice and read the Liza Dalby book holding forth about the rules of how to wear a kimono properly skeeves me out just about as badly as seeing people wandering around in the polyester lingerie version of a kimono which are sold with the word "geisha" thrown gratuitously into the product description; it's all appropriation of iconic rituals out of context. There are certainly no panels on how to go about organizing, which quite likely explains a few things. The swag has gotten cheap, sleazy, or both, the art is just barely starting to move away from bad fanart and toward good original work, and the commercial industry's desperately heavy-handed (not to mention usurious) approach to fansubs has killed any possibility of the video track showing a taste of the hot new titles.

Most of all, though least tangibly, at sf cons I got a sense of "protecting our own". It's not a monolithic population by any means; there are abuses, there are predators, there are people who do think the fandom is monolithic and therefore stomp on other people's feet. But if a total stranger overhears, in the hall at an sf con, that my cat just died, she's more likely than not to ask if I need a hug, and to dispense a very comforting one, and possibly a handkerchief. At recent anime cons, on the other hand, I've gotten a sense of "high school", of competition and judgment and prickliness.


So I'm going back. Next year? I'm not doing Ohayocon or Youmacon. I'm doing ConFusion, which I knew from days of yore. Maybe anime cons will grow up a bit if we just give them another five years or so.

[personal profile] destinyislands 2011-02-03 06:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Saw this through [community profile] animanga_news. I'm in the Southeast, and the only big anime cons right around me are AWA and Momocon, which are two very different settings.

Momocon offers limited things in regards to what can be sold or worn there. (Basically, everything has to be PG-13 or lower) but it has dones of panels on industry related things, how to's (beyond the usual cosplay), and I think there may have been some outside type guides. I'd say they're still at an intro level but varied at least. It's a little too PG-13 for me though.

AWA definitely falls into being fail at panels. I can't even remember what panels were there the last time I was there. As for art, I believe they had a rule in the artist alley that a certain percent of an artist's work had to be original (I think it was 50%?), no matter what the medium. The con does have midnight activities, but they're for adults only, so there's still a bunch of kids just standing around doing nothing. The atmosphere there doesn't have that "protect our own" to me. It really does have that high school competition feel to it. After cosplaying once at one, I thought about never cosplaying to AWA again. Aside from people touching my costume without even asking me first (or even saying hello), there were people who'd ask me how much it cost for my costume and then saying "OMG you paid that much for that?!", and other people, cosplaying as character from the sane series, after asking me if I was a certain character who then say "you're not acting like this character enough. You're doing it wrong!" x-x I've seen a lot of stealing in the Dealer's Room too. And sellers screwing over people buying by switching out an item for a cheaper, similar item and rushing the customer off before they notice. I've seen a lot of that. Since there were a lot of kids, there were a lot of parents in shock at a lot of things and ranting about how "weird" everything is. I really wish there were some outsider type panels for parents.

I really wish there was a more mature attitude at cons here. I've considered saving up my money and just going to Dragon Con (sf con) instead.