The Anime Trivia Quizbook: Fun Fan Fare or More?
Fannish party fluff or a serious reference
book? The Anime Trivia Quizbook Episode 1 does not aspire
to be any more than the former, but it has enough aspects of the latter
that libraries looking for primers on Japanese animation as related
to current American popular culture may find this a handy purchase. Ryan Omega has been active in anime fandom in the Berkeley, California
area all during his college days. He began writing these questions
as the host of an "Anime Game Show" at the annual Fanime Convention
in San Jose each winter. The book reflects this TV game-show format;
full of snappy patter and wisecracks. But it is also designed for
the full spectrum of fans, from the neophytes to the veterans. The Quizbook is divided into seventeen categories covering
such themes as Boys' Anime, Girls' Anime, Video Games, Romance, Science
Fiction & Mecha, Cultural, Gender Confusion, and the like. Each
has five sets of five questions of increasing difficulty. The Japanese animation covered in these questions are generally those
movies and TV programs most popular in the American anime fan community
during the past five years. This does not mean only anime titles
released in America. Fans are notorious for obtaining video copies
of new anime directly from Japan and spreading them around to their
friends, and for keeping up with the latest news in the untranslated
Japanese anime fan magazines. Most of the easy questions are based
upon the most popular titles in American TV and video releases. The
harder questions are as likely to require a knowledge of the differences
between the original Japanese and the American releases of these same
programs (such as referring to rice balls as "doughnuts") and to popular
new titles in Japan which have not been released in America at all,
as to more obscure titles. Or to news from the Japanese fan magazines
about the most popular anime artists and voice talent. Anime has developed a stereotype in America as pandering to adolescent
obsessions with sex and violence. Since this trivia quiz is aimed
toward those mostly-adolescent fans, some of the questions are a bit
risqué or show a fascination with some of the more bizarre
(to Americans) aspects of Japanese culture. An example is a question
about a popular voice actress, Kikuko Inoue, which identifies her
as having told her fans she believes that she was a fish in her past
life, and whose roles include Boku no Sexual Harassment, an
adult office comedy in which she plays an office employee who is frustrated
because all the handsome men are gay and dating each other. To help make this Quizbook more informative for neophyte fans,
Omega has scattered numerous brief explanations of Japanese cultural
aspects that are often puzzling. For example: "When biographies
of anime characters are made, one of the things that is always mentioned
is the character's blood type. Why? Americans could care less that
dedicated Street Fighter Ryu has blood type O, but the Japanese use
blood types (ketsueki-gata) to analyze personalities. If you
knew nothing about Ryu except his blood type, you would at least know
he is inclined to be a determined young man with a strong sense of
purpose [...]. This blood-type trait assessment [...], like horoscopes,
is used in Japan to determine a person's disposition and personality."
(pg. 82)
























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