Francis M. Agnoli is an independent animation scholar who specializes in the production of racialized identities in US television animation. His work has been published in the edited collection Fantasy/Animation: Connections Between Media, Mediums and Genres and in the journals Animation: An Interdisciplinary Journal and Animation Studies.
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Francis M. Agnoli's work is ahead of the curve in dealing with American animation efforts to represent Asian-ness and with the international production system that is becoming the standard for the industry.--Richard J. Leskosky, independent animation studies scholar and former president of the Society for Animation Studies Race and the Animated Bodyscape intervenes in the fields of animation study and ethnicfocused discussion in nonlive-action media with theoretical and methodological ingenuity. The holistic approach that gives voices to insider perspectives on the creative processes allows us to unravel the interconnected network of animation production.--Xinyu Chen "Journal of Popular Culture" Francis M. Agnoli provides a thorough study of the American TV anime series Avatar and Korra. By exploring the complexities of the production process, this book offers needful insight into matters of race, Asian identity, and the concept of the animated bodyscape.--Tze-yue G. Hu, author of Frames of Anime: Culture and Image-Building and coeditor of Animating the Spirited: Journeys and Transformations

