People's Daily Tonight: Podcast News (6/15/2019 Sat.)
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This is People's Daily Tonight, your news source from China. 

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Artists rethink how to package Chinese elements for foreign markets

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A publicity poster of The Outcast. (Photo: Courtesy of Wang Xin)

When he began producing the first season of The Outcast in 2015, Wang Xin never expected the animation works he directed to become so popular with overseas audiences.

The Outcast is set in the contemporary world, and tells the story of a group of Chinese born with superpowers drawn from Taoism. 

Successfully 'going out'

Full of Taoist terms and internet catchphrases, the first season of The Outcast scored 8.8 on Douban, China's film rating website.

Screened in July 2016 in China, the animation soon entered Japan and attracted an army of fans in the country.

"In fact, young Japanese are very interested in Chinese culture," Wang told the Global Times, adding that in Japan the best-selling comics include One Piece, followed by Kingdom, which tells the Chinese historical story about how the first emperor of the Qin Dynasty (221BC-206BC) unified the six states.

Wang said most foreigners have an incomplete understanding of Chinese culture, as they believe it is all about Kungfu, cheongsams and dragon dances, aspects that Chinese films have frequently showcased in past decades. 

Young foreign audiences have become tired of these rigid Chinese cultural icons.

According to danimestore, Japan's largest online animation website, The Outcast ranked sixth on the first day it was aired in Japan.

"Young people would be more open to Chinese culture if these icons were expressed in new forms such as music and animation," Wang said.

After being shown in Japan, The Outcast also attracted attention from other countries, as it has been translated by netizens into Spanish and English on YouTube.

Wang said that he read audience feedback on Twitter after every episode was aired in Japan, and there were hundreds of comments from other countries such as Thailand and South Korea discussing the Taoist terms and elements in the animation.

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Cultural treasure trove

"Chinese animation is facing a new opportunity, as the world is eager to know more about the real China with the rise of China's economy," said Cai Zhijun, general manager of the CCTV Animation Studio Co, noting that China's animation production techniques and creative concepts have seen great progress. 

However, it is never an easy job to translate cultural terms into another language and still maintain the same deeper meaning. Internet catchphrases, dialect and religious and culture-related terms are a highlight of animation works within China, but become an obstacle to bringing animation works overseas.

"Many religious and cultural terms are still hard to understand for Japanese people even after being translated into their language," said Wang. Eventually, the translation team adopted Japanese terms that had a close meaning and similar connotations.

"Chinese culture is such a treasure trove that one single historical feature can find a place in the Japanese comic sector," said Wang, 

It is more important to stoke audience's interest in Chinese culture and guide them to proactively search for more information on the subject, according to Wang.

"Since Taoism cannot be clearly explained by an animation, we try to spark people's interest in Chinese culture by giving them a general picture of Taoism," he said. 

"Young Japanese people were very interested in the Taoist elements after watching the animation," he noted. 

"They would dig for more information on the culture behind a single item such as a tea cup, a sword, a roof, even a door."

The path ahead for Chinese animations going overseas is long and unclear, but with more Chinese animation successfully "going out," new opportunities also await.

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And that's People's Daily Tonight. Thanks for joining us.

(Produced by He Jieqiong; text from Global Times/Li Lei)