dug up the site Neil Cohn on visual language. Pasus quietly. Couple цитат из
Japanese Visual Language
Indeed, Japanese children imitate Standard JVL [Japanese Visual Language] in their figures in extremely high proportions (and increasingly outside of Japan), often leading to higher proficiency in graphic creation than children from other parts of the world (Wilson 2000; Cox et al. 2001)
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copying from manga may actually prevent a drop-off in drawing ability that seems to occur during puberty for children in most cultures except Japan (Toku 2001)
Кто пробовал копировать Дональда or Asterix, not to mention American supermen, the chip will understand.
Wilson, Brent. 2000. Becoming Japanese: Manga, Children's Drawings, and the Construction of National Character. Visual Arts Research 25 (2) :48-60. (Paid access only)
Cox, Maureen V., Masuo Koyasu, Hiromasa Hiranuma, and Julian Perara. 2001. Children's human figure drawings in the UK and Japan: The effects of age, sex, and culture. British Journal of Developmental Psychology 19:275-292. (Paid access only)
Toku, Masami. 2001. What is Manga?: The Influence of Pop-culture in Adolescent Art
Cox, Maureen V., Masuo Koyasu, Hiromasa Hiranuma, and Julian Perara. 2001. Children's human figure drawings in the UK and Japan: The effects of age, sex, and culture. British Journal of Developmental Psychology 19:275-292. (Paid access only)
Toku, Masami. 2001. What is Manga?: The Influence of Pop-culture in Adolescent Art
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