The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Das Kartoon: Romance meets propaganda in China’s Marx anime

- By Eva Xiao

BEIJING: The Chinese Communist Party is trying a new way to woo younger people, commission­ing an anime series whose hero is clean-shaven, slim and a hopeless romantic — Karl Marx.

Called “The Leader”, the online cartoon series is designed to make Marx more palatable to China’s younger generation, which usually encounters the bearded German philosophe­r through thick textbooks and classes.

“There is a lot of literary work about Karl Marx, but not as much in a format that young people can accept,” Zhuo Sina, one of the scriptwrit­ers behind the online series, told AFP.

“We wanted to fill this gap,” she added. “We hope more people can have a more positive understand­ing of and interest in Marx and his biography.”

Created by animation studio Wawayu but backed by China’s central propaganda department and the state-run Marxism Research and Constructi­on Programme Office, the release of “The Leader” comes as the Chinese Communist Party ramps up its push for ideologica­l rigour — especially in classrooms and on university campuses.

With its Ferrari-driving elites cashing in on an economic boom that has revolution­ised China since the economy was opened to market forces in 1978, Beijing’s allegiance to Marx may seem like an anomaly.

But the Communist Party is still loyal to its ideologica­l forefather, dismissing the apparent contradict­ion and framing its evolution through a prism of “Socialism with Chinese Characteri­stics”.

Students start learning the theories of Marx and Lenin in middle school, and civil servants — even journalist­s in staterun media — have to take mandatory courses in Marxist theory to secure promotions.

Last year, Chinese President Xi Jinping also urged party members to cultivate the habit of reading Marxist classics and regard it as a “way of life” and “spiritual pursuit”. That also means that the scriptwrit­ers of “The Leader” have had to compromise some aspects of storytelli­ng for the sake of accuracy, said Zhuo.

“You can’t just write whatever,” she emphasised, explaining that Marxism scholars were involved in the whole process of scriptwrit­ing.

She said the story of Marx should not pander to the demands of the entertainm­ent industry, where there is “no way to make very careful and precise or very accurate descriptio­ns.” Subversive comments

After debuting at the end of January on Bilibili, a video streaming platform popular among young anime, comic and gaming fans in China, the online serial has been streamed more than five million times.

“The Leader” starts with Marx’s university years where shots of the young philosophe­r — dressed in a dapper beige blazer — feverishly studying the work of Hegel are spliced between tender moments with Jenny von Westphalen, his wife.

But the masses have been tough critics — on popular Chinese film and literature site Douban, users gave ‘The Leader’ a two-star rating out of five. Some criticised the storytelli­ng as “awkward”, while others used more colourful language — one likened the experience of watching the series with “shoving” excrement in their mouth.

Jeroen de Kloet, professor at the University of Amsterdam, who has researched Chinese youth culture and media, said there was too much talking in the series and not enough scenes that “humanize” Marx.

“It’s the government lecturing young people on what Marxism is about”, he said.

Still, despite its propaganda bent, the TV series has opened a surprising space for discussion on Marxism and even labour rights in China. Among the many comments scrolling across the screen as each episode plays — a popular feature in China known as “bullet” comments

There is a lot of literary work about Karl Marx, but not as much in a format that young people can accept. – Zhuo Sina, scriptwrit­er

— some users commented on religious freedom and labour rights.

In one comment, a user wrote about the forced shutdown of a social media account that follows labour activism. — AFP

 ??  ?? This frame grab released by the animation studio Wawayu taken on Feb 25 shows a scene from the online cartoon series ‘The Leader’ as German philosophe­r Karl Marx delivers a speech. — AFP photo
This frame grab released by the animation studio Wawayu taken on Feb 25 shows a scene from the online cartoon series ‘The Leader’ as German philosophe­r Karl Marx delivers a speech. — AFP photo

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