@HokutoMumyoZan If I am being entirely honest, I don't really understand where this argument of "what can be considered anime" is ultimately coming from, is it an honest inquiry when a work is made that does not fit neatly into any category, or is it fueled by some self-righteous push to remove the "barrier" between anime and western animation, I really don't know. At the end of the day a genre should describe the work, this whole discussion is a bit of an exercise in pencil pushing bureaucracy, if the king of the universe decrees that JoJo is a Cartoon and spongebob is an anime nothing will change about those shows. I understand the push-back from people who feel like their hobby is conflated with something foreign, I don't understand the reason for the push so much (because like I said, nothing of substance would change).
HokutoMumyoZan said:It would be the easiest solution to call it all anime- Avatar, Castlevania, Devil May Cry, (both netflix), but has the core fandom of anime in the USA found its sense of respect to present to honor Japan proudly? Has it done what it took to clear its own baggage, to feel proud not just of putting out work reaching the level of anime but to feel proud and dignified of themselves?
Easiest? Yes. But it removes nuance, its like saying, starting tomorrow, Prog rock, K-Pop and death metal are all "Music". People see a distinction between western and Japanese animation, and so they want to classify things based on that identity, I don't see any issues with that. The west should do its own thing and try to stand alongside anime, maybe in the future we will have further stupid terms like "wanime" (patent pending) which is just as good as anime with its own strengths and weaknesses. There can be nuance, there can be distinctions.
I feel like the framing in your last sentence is telling of what the issue might be, that if western animation was "good enough" and "was able to reconcile its baggage" then it could be anime. It sort of reveals an implicit idea that to be worth anything you have to be anime and therefore you have to play the language game to reclassify western animation as anime. But like I previously alluded to, I don't subscribe to this idea. Every country has their own culture and identity, anime is Japan's. The goal should not be to "be like anime" but to make works that are compelling and authentic to that culture, that stand on their own and have their own identity regardless of what anime is or is not. Western animation already has an identity if we just look back to find it, there are amazing works of western animation like the Thief and the Cobbler that are nothing like anime, we just need to realize that.
But yeah, obviously it is a muddy subject that can be viewed in many different ways.