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Rhetorical Analysis Piece for Extra Credit

Rhetorical Analysis on the Anime Paranoia Agent 

Victor Hernandez

Paranoia Agent is a anime series written by Satoshi Kon, who was a Japanese film director, animator, screenwriter and manga artist from Sapporo, Hokkaidō. When Kon was in High School, he wanted to be an animator. He entered a Graphic Design course at Musashino Art University, and made his debut as a manga artist after. Paranoia Agent is about a social phenomenon in Musashino, Tokyo, where people are beginning to get attacked by a juvenile serial assailant named Lil’ Slugger, who wears a red cap, golden roller skates, and has a crooked yellow bat. As Lil’ Slugger grows as a problem, a fictional pink dog called Maromi, which is a plushy created by one of the victims of Lil’ Slugger, Tsukiko, grows frighteningly fast in popularity as well. Long story short, the anime explores the lives of people who are affected by Lil’ Slugger, who is not stated as real or a figment of imagination, and as the series goes on, the watcher learns the secrets behind the lives of the people, and the secrets behind Maromi and Lil’ Slugger. 

The theme of Paranoia Agent is the consequences of repression. Tsukiko, after creating Maromi, was under a lot of pressure to create another mascot that could be another big hit by her job. She gets attacked by Lil Slugger with a crooked yellow bat, and receives some hate mail. Maromi symbolizes the distraction from reality Tsukiko creates as she deals with the stress, which is shown when Maromi starts moving and talking to Tsukiko, and tells her to ignore the hate and stress in her life caused by her job, instead of facing the problems. The escapism portrayed through Maromi spreads as she becomes more popular in Musashino, and more merchandise is created of her, like shirts and hats, and more people use Maromi as a distraction from their problems. Lil’ Slugger grows in popularity as well, and people start realizing that people who got attacked by him don’t have problems anymore that they used to have. Lil Slugger becomes a distraction for the people as well, since apparently their problems are gone if they get hit by Lil’ Slugger. From a corrupt officer who is indebted to the Yakuza (gangsters in Japan) and is forced to commit crimes to pay off his debt and protect the home his family lives in, which he justifies by thinking he is a hero that is just doing what is good for his family, even though his indulgence in girls and alcohol is what made him indebted to the Yakuza in the first place, to a detective that can not pay for a life saving treatment for his dying wife, and ends up in reality created by Maromi in which the problems he has never existed, and they are gone from his memory, such as him not being able to have a child since his wife’s body could not handle it. Whether it’s Maromi, Lil’ Slugger, or delusions people created in their own minds, they found a way to distract themselves from their problems. 

Short Reflective Paragraph : I can connect to the source because I distracted myself from my problems, and I didn’t realize it for a long time. Whether it’s games for 8 hours straight, or scrolling through social media, or watching shows/movies, I found things that made me temporarily forget about whatever was on my mind. I watched Paranoia Agent, and since it was a very confusing anime, I went looking for answers. I saw a video explaining what happened, and I started realizing that all the bad things that happened in the anime was a result of people running away from the problems they had. I realized that even though the anime aired in 2004, the lessons it portrayed were more than prevalent today. In today’s society, people use the technology they have to distract themselves from their problems. With the click of a finger, people can indulge in other people’s lives, which can temporarily make them forget about their own. This can be frighteningly addicting, and people start digging themselves into bigger holes and bigger problems by, instead of facing their problems, distract themselves from them. Paranoia Agent helped me realize that I was subconsciously distracting myself from my problems, and a lot of people do, whether they know it or not.

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Language Presentation

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/17bZ8l2FJc4MCGpcv4tEqp-5Y-HPYZIbDWovPkyz4A80/edit#slide=id.g30b37a4b687_0_0

Link to my Language Presentation

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Research Proposal

Topic Overview: My research will focus on if there’s an impact that language has on a person’s moral decisions. Specifically, how their judgments or way of thinking about a situation might be affected by the language they are told the situation in. This is debatable because it talks about two topics that from the surface, seem to have no correlation with each other. And for language to be a factor insomeone’s morals can make someone question that their thoughts aren’t fully free, and that they are easily influenced, even by something as simple as language. Morals are thought to be meaningful and concrete. It is an argument about whether or not our sense of right and wrong can be influenced by language, or if our morals stay the same regardless of language. I think this topic prompted my interest because it brings up two things that seem to have no correlation.It’s an important issue because it challenges the idea that our morals aren’t just affected by our environment or culture, or how we are biologically

Purpose and Research Questions

The purpose of my research is to challenge the idea that our morals are only affected by our environment or how we are biologically. I hope to show that our morals might not be as concreteas we think they are, or maybe that there’s so many things that subconsciously affect our actions and thoughts every day that we are not aware of. The two research questions that will guide my research are

– Do people have different moral judgements of a situation based on the language they are told it in?

– If so, are there other small things that also influence a person’s moral decisions?

Audience

My primary audience will be people who speak more than one language, people who don’t, and people who are interested in the different ways our morals are changed

Approach

I plan to look at scholarly articles surrounding the topic. I want to also look at studies that might have taken place on peoples responses to moral situations and how they are the same or different based on the language

Significance

This is significant because it highlights the importance of language when it comes to making moral decisions. It challenges the idea that our morals are only affected by our environment or culture

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Language Essay

“You speak too low. You need to project your voice. You look scared. Fix your posture.” For a lot of my childhood, that’s what my dad would tell me. I grew up very timid, as I imagine some of us can relate to. I don’t exactly know why though, I was just like that as long as I could remember. I remember peeing myself in middle school because I was too scared to raise my hand and go to the bathroom during class, and wanted to wait until lunch break(tmi?). I was so close to the urinal too, I was practically on top of it, but I waited too long. That’s one of my most memorable middle school moments, not just because I peed myself, but because I spent the next 2 hours or so trying to hide the stain on my khaki pants until dismissal. Good times. 

I think this photo encapsulates how I struggled with language when I was younger. This was an art project in the 4th grade where I put my favorite t-shirt on, took a picture with it, and drew a background for it. My posture, smile, my arms; all just scream ‘scared’. I remember feeling, being, and looking scared or sad a lot of the time. I look back at this picture and I think about how I couldn’t raise my hand to use the bathroom. How I used to get bullied, or how I wouldn’t really talk to anyone out of my normal bubble. When someone did me wrong, I wouldn’t speak up for myself. I would just do whatever my parents told me to do, and I was scared of doing anything else.  I think for a lot of kids, it’s hard to find your voice. You grow up just doing whatever your parents want you to do, to the point where you convince yourself that what they want is what you want. That’s certainly how I felt, and I hadn’t even realized it.  I think a big part in why I struggled with language so much was because of how much my dad knit picked how I would talk, the way I would stand, the way I would eat, or even drink. Not to say that it was completely wrong though, I think in some ways I benefited from the criticism, but it also set me back a lot from other kids my age back then in the sense that it made me so conscious about everything I would do, and doing something that I know he wouldn’t approve of would lower my sense of self. And since my dad was my biggest influence back then, I would pay a lot of mind to what he would say. But as you grow up, you start to see your parents, and the people older than you,  in a different light. They’re human too, they have insecurities, flaws, all that good stuff.  I remember my dad telling me how one of his old co-workers did something during work that he shouldn’t have done, and instead of taking responsibility, he blamed it on my dad. My dad didn’t really fight against it, even though he knew it was his co-worker, and he got fired because of it. I felt that my eyes were opened a little more to the world after he told me that. My parents have struggled and still struggle to find their voice, even at their age. My sisters struggle with finding their voice, and so does some of my extended family. People I have met throughout all my life, whether old or young, struggle with language as well. It might just be me, but I always used to think that older people would have everything in their life figured out. I used to think my parents had their lives figured out. But in reality, a lot of people don’t, they’re just better at hiding it. (i’m pretty sure I’ve heard a quote like that somewhere) 

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Language, Morals, and Perception

Introduction : What are morals? According to the Dictionary from “Oxford Languages” morals are “a person’s standards of behavior or beliefs concerning what is and is not acceptable for them to do.” The origins of morals date back to early human societies, where they relied on morality for cooperation to have more likely chances of surviving, since it’s easier to survive when it’s not just you, but other people with you working towards survival. This is why there’s laws that tell the people what is right and what is wrong. Without them society wouldn’t progress and not nearly as much would get done. Morals are necessary and important in human society, and they are not something that should be looked over. 

Further along the line, when more complex societies came into fruition, philosophers like Plato or Aristotle went further down the hole of the importance of thinking about morals and developing ones that benefited oneself. Plato states that morality is about wisdom, seeking what good is, living in harmony with your soul, and living earnestly with your soul. He thought that if everyone lived this way, society would be good and fair. Now, it wasn’t just about surviving, but also thriving, how society can be its best self, how people can be their happiest self, how to learn acceptance, self-control, discipline, all things that today are necessary for a person to function properly. Many philosophers that are popular even thousands of years after their death because of their wisdom, shared their methods of thriving and how important morals were when it came to thriving. 

Not only that, but morality showed up in religion as well, across everywhere. From christianity to islam to hinduism, there are things that are stated clearly good and bad in each. Murder being bad, or stealing, or lying, or adultery. Giving to people in need, respecting loved ones, being honest, and having good intentions towards people. Billions of people have adopted these ideas, and they influenced how they live their lives. Whatever it is, it is true across the board that morality has had a big part throughout human history. From survival, to thriving, to religion. 

When people think of what makes their morals, they think of a variety of things. First, how they grew up, who they grew up with, their life experiences, their culture. Person 1 can grow up around an empathetic family, and they might give others more patience because that’s what they think is right. Person 2 might grow up with a family that doesn’t have the same empathy as person 1, and as a result don’t give people as much patience as them. Person 1 grew up in a Christian Family, and believes it’s not right to curse or to lie. Person 2 grew up in a family that wasn’t as religious, and so as a result doesn’t view lying as serious as person 1 does. The environment we are in, the people we are around, those are factors that play into what makes morals.  Now when people think of what could change those values, they probably think of meeting new people, maturing, or maybe new experiences. Tony recently lost someone important to him, and as opposed to before when he would skip on family hangouts to get some extra work done at his job, now he values time with his family more than work. Things almost everyone agrees on that have a big impact on people’s lives. Now what about perception? Perception and morals go hand in hand. The way one perceives things is the way they will decide what is right or wrong. According to Oxford Languages, perception is “a way of regarding, understanding, or interpreting something; a mental impression.” Perception is affected by the same things that morals are affected by; experiences, people, biology, etc. And while it is true those things can influence one’s morals and one’s perceptions, something we don’t consider too much when it comes to changing them is language. Language heavily influences oneself, both when it comes to how people feel about moral situations, and people’s perceptions. 

Claim 1 : Language can heavily affect morals by changing how people feel about moral situations. A study at the University of Chicago and Pompeu Fabra University did involving the trolley problem. It involved whether a person would push someone heavy off a bridge to stop a trolley to save 5 people aboard. The researchers found that when native Spanish speakers faced this dilemma in English, people were more likely to “respond with a utilitarian approach” even though it involved them having to physically push a man to save the collective group of people. This was also true for native English speakers when they were faced with this dilemma in spanish. This study showed that people judge based on their emotions less in a foreign language, since they were more sure of pushing a man off a cliff when the situation was told in a foreign language. This is important because it shows the vast effect language has on one’s morals, to the point where they can change. The experiences, people, culture, all these things that make your morals; not only those things can make them, but so can the simple change of a language.

This isn’t the only study exploring this concept. In a study conducted by the Journal of Experimental social psychology, the researchers conducted 3 individual studies on how morals are affected by language. The first study presented native italian and german speakers to 4 scenarios;  a owner eating their dog after it got into a car crash because he was curious of what dogs tasted like, incest, a student copying another student in an exam in which no one gets caught, and finally, a woman who finds a national flag in her closet, cuts it up into pieces, and uses the pieces to clean the toilet. In this first study, the results found that there was a significant effect language had on how wrong the participants thought the moral situations were. The scenarios were judged less harshly in the foreign language, which was English, than in the native language. The bar graph of the study can be viewed below, the independent variable being the scenario, and the dependent variable being how wrong the people being surveyed viewed each scenario. One can conclude from this study that emotions play less of a part in judgments when the judgments are made from a situation told in a foreign language, proving that language can change how harshly people feel about situations. This is very important because these studies really bring up the question on why this is the case, how does a change in language really make someone think more utilitarian. Is this change positive or negative? I believe that this change is a positive one, as it is derived less from personal biases or emotions, which can sway someone’s opinion. A possible reason for this is that since using another language the brain has to work harder to process the information, there is less emotional involvement. 

Claim  2: Language also heavily influences perception. A hypothesis that explores the effect language has on perception is the Sapir Whorf hypothesis. This hypothesis states that people have less or more of an understanding of the world based on their language. This would be because some languages don’t have specific words to describe things, whether it’s describing color, space, or time. 

The article “How The Age of Language Acquisition Relates to Creativity” by Leera Boroditsky states that “the languages we speak affect our perceptions of the world. People from different cultures have different mental experiences. They have a different perception of the world: physical characteristics of space and time, the events and their sequences.” In this case, we’ll focus on color. An example of this would be the ‘russian blue’ study in which researchers in 2007 examined how language affected one’s perception of colors. “Russian speakers have two words for blue—goluboy (light blues) and siniy (dark blues)– whereas English speakers have only one. English and Russian speakers were tested on speeded color discrimination tasks. The Russian speakers fared quite better than their English-speaking counterparts. The results seem to suggest that language does have a notable influence on a person’s perception, at least in the objective recognition of colors.” Some languages have multiple words for one thing. Hypothetically, according to this study, having more words for a certain thing gives a better understanding  of the thing. Since the Russian language had two words for blue, they did better on discriminating colors from one another, as opposed to english speakers who only have one. This is also observed when it comes to different languages describing snow. In English, the only word for snow is ‘snow’. However, for the Inuit, an indigenous tribe in the arctic and subarctic regions of north america, there are multiple words for snow, for snow that is wet, for snow that is clinging, etc. Therefore, the innuit have a better understanding of snow because of the many words they use for snow, compared to english since they only have one word for it. This is the case for many other languages as well that put importance on certain things, like Arabic, which has multiple words for camels and stages for love. This reflects what this language puts importance on. It also allows for more of a fine distinction between these stages of love or these types of camels then lets say english which only has one word for a camel, probably because most if not all english speaking countries don’t have many camels in their society. Language does not only influence perception, but is also a reflection of the values or norms of the societies that use them to an extent. It goes hand in hand with culture, which does the same thing. 

Counter Argument

Some people might say how linguistic relativity, also known as the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis, is not agreed upon by many philosophers. To this I say that while the strong version of this hypothesis is not agreed to be true, which is that language determines thought, it is agreed upon by many philosophers that language does have an influence on how people think. And this influence is shown through the various languages and the various words that are used for certain things or the lack of words for certain things. 

Some people would say that language isn’t as strong of a factor when influencing people’s morals as say, experiences, culture, or people that you grow up with. To this I say that I agree with that, and while that is true, my point isn’t trying to prove that language is a stronger influencer in morals than these things, but that it does have an effect, and the effect is stronger than is thought, as shown through the trolley experiment. And the same is true for perception. While the influence culture has on morals is greater than the influence language has on it, there is evidence that language has an influence, as show through the Russian blue experiment. 

Another counter argument that could be made is that culture more specifically is a stronger influencer of morals. I would agree with this as well, but to say language isn’t close to being as strong of a factor would be incorrect. Language and culture are intertwined, and so to say that language doesn’t come close to having the impact culture has on perception and morals would be wrong because one doesn’t go without the other. As stated with the Inuit example, language can have a lot of words for something, therefore signifying that there is more of an importance put on certain words, and that there is a better understanding of certain things due to the amount of words that can be used in a language to describe something. Whether it’s a type of snow, or a type of action, or a type of belief. 

Conclusion 

In conclusion, language plays an undeniable and underrated role for influencing our morals and perception. And it goes past that as well. Language shapes a lot of things, such as our decisions, how we understand things, etc. While culture, our experiences, and the people we are surrounded by have a more major role in these things, language has a stronger impact than people think, and everyone should be more mindful in how they use that language.

Language is more important now than ever. The internet connects people from thousands of miles away, and lets them communicate with each other, post mostly whatever they want, and more. Machine translation is a thing now, where you don’t even have to speak the same language to communicate with one another. As this communication reaches more and more people in a way it couldn’t before, language will have a stronger effect on people and even society than the effect that it’s already had for people today.

Works Cited

Florey, Chelsea. “Using a Foreign Language Changes Moral Decisions.” University of Chicago News, 16 Dec. 2016

Barrett, Lisa Feldman, et al. “The Influence of Language on Moral Judgment.” Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 

Kostandyan, Aram E., and Y. A. Ledovaya. “How the Age of Language Acquisition Relates to Creativity.” Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences

Keysar, Boaz, et al. “The Foreign-Language Effect: Thinking in a Foreign Tongue Reduces Decision Biases.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Stolberg, Shira. “How ‘Snow Words’ Started a Linguistic Kerfuffle.” The Christian Science Monitor, 5 Mar. 2020

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