Comment by ksymph
3 days ago
This is neither here nor there but the character isn't a cat. It's in the name, Anubis, who is an Egyptian deity typically depicted as a jackal or generic canine, and the gatekeeper of the afterlife who weighs the souls of the dead (hence the tagline). So more of a dog-girl, or jackal-girl if you want to be technical.
Every representation I've ever seen of Anubis - including remarkably well preserved statues from antiquity - are either a male human body with a canine head, or fully canine.
This anime girl is not Anubis. It's a modern cartoon characters that simply borrows the name because it sounds cool, without caring anything about the history or meaning behind it.
Anime culture does this all the time, drawing on inspiration from all cultures but nearly always only paying the barest lip service to the original meaning.
I don't have an issue with that, personally. All cultures and religions should be fair game as inspiration for any kind of art. But I do have an issue with claiming that the newly inspired creation is equivalent in any way to the original source just because they share a name and some other very superficial characteristics.
It's also that the anime style already makes all heads shaped vaguely like felines. Add upwards pointing furry ears and it's not wrong to call it a cat girl.
> they share a name and some other very superficial characteristics.
I wasn't implying anything more than that, although now I see the confusing wording in my original comment. All I meant to say was that between the name and appearance it's clear the mascot is canid rather than feline. Not that the anime girl with dog ears is an accurate representation of the Egyptian deity haha.
It's refreshing to see a reply as thought out as this in today's day and and age of "move fast and post garbage".
I think you're taking it a bit too seriously. In turn, I am, of course, also taking it too seriously.
> I do have an issue with claiming that the newly inspired creation is equivalent in any way to the original source
Nobody is claiming that the drawing is Anubis or even a depiction of Anubis, like the statues etc. you are interested in. It's a mascot. "Mascot design by CELPHASE" -- it says, in the screenshot.
Generally speaking -- I can't say that this is what happened with this project -- you would commission someone to draw or otherwise create a mascot character for something after the primary ideation phase of the something. This Anubis-inspired mascot is, presumably, Anubis-inspired because the project is called Anubis, which is a name with fairly obvious connections to and an understanding of "the original source".
> Anime culture does this all the time, ...
I don't know what bone you're picking here. This seems like a weird thing to say. I mean, what anime culture? It's a drawing on a website. Yes, I can see the manga/anime influence -- it's a very popular, mainstream artform around the world.
I like to talk seriously about art, representation, and culture. What's wrong with that? It's at least as interesting as discussing databases or web frameworks.
In case you feel it needs linking to the purpose of this forum, the art in question here is being forcefully shown to people in a situation that makes them do a massive context switch. I want to look at the linux or ffmpeg source code but my browser failed a security check and now I'm staring at a random anime girl instead. What's the meaning here, what's the purpose behind this? I feel that there's none, except for the library author's preference, and therefore this context switch wasted my time and energy.
Maybe I'm being unfair and the code author is so wrapped up in liking anime girls that they think it would be soothing to people who end up on that page. In which case, massive failure of understanding the target audience.
Maybe they could allow changing the art or turning it off?
> Anime culture does this all the time >> I don't know what bone you're picking here
I'm not picking any bone there. I love anime, and I love the way it feels so free in borrowing from other cultures. That said, the anime I tend to like is more Miyazaki or Satoshi Kon and less kawaii girls.
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I'm assuming the aversion is more about why young anime girls are popping up, not about what animal it is
Why is there an aversion though? Is it about the image itself or because of the subculture people are associating with the image?
Both. I don't want any random pictures of young girls popping up while I'm browsing the web, and why would adults insert pictures of young girls into their project in the first place?
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It's an aversion to the sexualised depiction of girls barely the age of puberty or under the age of consent.
I'd ask why you /don't/ have an aversion to that?
(yes, "not all anime" etc...)
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Well, thank you for that. That's a great weight off me mind.
... but entirely lacking the primary visual feature that Anubis had.