Kuwait Times

Japan choosing 88 animation travel spots to boost tourism

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TOKYO: Eighty-eight places in Japan are going to be designated “animation spots” to encourage tourism - using train stations, school campuses, rural shrines and other fairly everyday places where popular “manga” characters are depicted.

Such landmarks number in the tens of thousands, given the popularity and volume of “manga” comics In Japan. But this is being billed as the official list for any fan’s animation “pilgrimage,” as the places are known as “seichi,” or “sacred spots.”

People around the world can vote on the landmarks through a website set up in several languages, including English and Chinese. “Japanese pop culture has grown to rival American Hollywood,” Tsugihiko Kadokawa, chairman of Kadokawa Corp. publisher and film studio, one of the officials behind the effort, said Friday at a Tokyo news conference. “Animation can change the times.”

The project highlights Japan’s recent push to make tourism a valuable boon for a stagnant economy, as dynamic as the export of the long-hailed Toyota cars and Sony video-game machines. Tourists from abroad have grown, under a “Cool Japan” initiative, reaching 20 million people last year - five years ahead of a goal set by the government, prompting officials to raise its 2020 target to 40 million tourists.

Kadokawa and other officials behind the newly formed Japan Anime Tourism Associatio­n said they would compile a travel route of 88 animation spots by December, including where manga and animation works took place, as well as the homes of manga artists and museums dedicated to their works.

Votes from fans will be taken into considerat­ion in compiling the list. “Vote for the special spot you want to share with everyone,” the site says. One shoo-in for the list, according to organizers, is Washinomiy­a Jinja, a picturesqu­e shrine in Saitama prefecture on the outskirts of Tokyo, a familiar scene in comics by Kagami Yoshimizu, which later became a TV animation series, “Lucky Star” or “Raki Suta.”

The shrine is not as grand or famous as others in the country, such as Meiji Shrine in central Tokyo, but it’s still the one to visit for those who love the manga series, which depicts friendship among schoolgirl­s, all illustrate­d with the huge eyes and colorful hair characteri­stic of manga. The shrine shows up in the opening sequence to the TV show, whose typical episode will feature a heated discussion in cute, cooing voices on the correct way to eat a pastry. Hopes are high at Washinomiy­a Jinja to be picked for the honors. “I’m all for it,” said Teruko Masaki, owner of a restaurant near the shrine, which sells noodles and other products with the manga characters splashed on the packaging.

 ??  ?? TOKYO: Japan Anime Tourism Associatio­n officials, from left, Kadokawa Corp. Chairman and the associatio­n’s Vice Chairman Tsuguhiko Kadokawa, Chairman Yoshiyuki Tomino, Director Yasuhiro Tsuboi, Director Tadashi Fujita and Director and Secretary General Yoshifumi Mori attend a press conference on the newly formed associatio­n yesterday while showing an entrance way view of Washinomiy­a Jinja in Saitama prefecture depicted in a Japanese TV animation series, “Lucky Star” or “Raki Suta” on the screen.
TOKYO: Japan Anime Tourism Associatio­n officials, from left, Kadokawa Corp. Chairman and the associatio­n’s Vice Chairman Tsuguhiko Kadokawa, Chairman Yoshiyuki Tomino, Director Yasuhiro Tsuboi, Director Tadashi Fujita and Director and Secretary General Yoshifumi Mori attend a press conference on the newly formed associatio­n yesterday while showing an entrance way view of Washinomiy­a Jinja in Saitama prefecture depicted in a Japanese TV animation series, “Lucky Star” or “Raki Suta” on the screen.

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