Protip: my prof is a guy XD
A) Gender and Desire: What role can anime play in showing us new ways of understanding gender and desire? In a variety of the readings and films, the issues of men and women (boys and girls) and their desires has become a flashpoint for thinking about the impact of anime. For example, what do you make of “moe”? What about gender-bending characters in anime, or in fan practices such as cosplay? How do you react to theories discussed in the readings? For example, is Hosoda right that the younger generation has a different way of thinking about the future, and what motivates people (see “Future Anime” in my book) or does Azuma’s thinking about “database” society alter
B) Collaborative Creativity: If anime is more than what happens on screen, how can we best understand the collaborative creativity that spreads across media forms and types of creators, from animators, to manga artists, to toy makers, to con and club organizers, to fans, and beyond? What does it really mean to say “creativity is collaborative” and how might this influence our understanding of the workings of the economy, or culture, or both? Does collaborative creativity mean we need to reconsider the proper place of copyright, pricing, and distribution rights in media, and if so, what are the principles that should guide this future system?
It goes on, but I kind of didn't want to copy the entire contents of the assignment up ^^
I don't think you need to find something "new" per se. You just need to formulate a decent argument/make good points/etc. That's my strategy for getting A's and B's. That might sound unorginal and I don't know your professor, but I'd think it would be sort of unfair of him to expect something truly mindblowing of his students. You aren't writing a book or doing a dissertation or anything(At least, I assume you aren't )
Yeaaaaaah I know. Honestly... IIIII go to a tech school and engineers can't write papers LOLOLOL (>_>), so the profs here pretty much grade papers even easier than they did in my HS. I'm not worried about the grade. The thing is, my professor is like, 150% made of awesome and I really love the class, so I don't want to just do the minimum required to get an A. With what I have so far, I could write a decent paper anyway, but I kind of want to write something really fascinating that hasn't been discussed academically much because I want to make people think; I don't want to write an unoriginal paper that doesn't present anything new.
For example, the last paper I wrote for another class was on the commercialization of anime fanart in the United States. There's a bit of published academic research on doujinshi, but pretty much none on stuff like this in the US. I had a total blast doing the research and writing that because of this, but it was hard to think of a topic!
Well, I guess it's a tall order to ask random people on the internet to help on something like this...