Miyazaki, Hayao, director. El Viaje de Chihiro . Studio Ghibli, 2001. Napier, Susan J. Miyazakiworld: A Life in Art . Yale University Press, 2018. Turner, Victor. The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure . Aldine Publishing, 1969. Note: This paper is written for a general academic or film studies audience. If you need a specific length, citation style (APA, MLA, Chicago), or a focus on a different theme (e.g., gender roles or Japanese folklore), let me know and I can adapt it.
Yubaba’s magic hinges on the power of naming. When Chihiro signs her contract, she forgets her real name; the boy Haku warns her: “If you forget your name, you’ll never find your way home.” This trope echoes animistic beliefs that names hold kotodama (spirit power). To remember “Chihiro” (meaning “a thousand questions” or “a thousand searches”) is to retain the authentic self against the homogenizing force of the bathhouse. Haku, who cannot remember his own name (the spirit of the Kohaku River), is trapped in Yubaba’s service. The film’s climax—Chihiro remembering that Haku’s true name is “Nigihayami Kohaku Nushi”—breaks the curse, illustrating that memory is the ultimate form of resistance. El Viaje de Chihiro
El Viaje de Chihiro endures because it does not offer easy redemption. Chihiro does not defeat Yubaba; she simply outgrows her. She leaves the spirit world having forgotten nothing, but her parents remember nothing—a bittersweet resolution suggesting that trauma and growth belong to the individual. In an era of ecological collapse and identity commodification, Miyazaki’s film argues that true heroism lies not in slaying monsters but in remembering one’s name, cleaning a polluted river, and having the courage to board a train to an unknown station. Chihiro’s journey is ultimately ours: to become a little less afraid, and a little more whole. Miyazaki, Hayao, director
The Liminal Journey of Self: Identity, Consumerism, and Tradition in Hayao Miyazaki’s El Viaje de Chihiro Napier, Susan J
The central setting, the Aburaya bathhouse, functions as an allegory for Japanese economic culture in the post-bubble era. Ruled by the witch Yubaba (a caricature of greedy capitalism), the bathhouse operates on a contract system that strips workers of their names—and thus their identities. Chihiro becomes “Sen” (literally “one thousand”), a numerical designation. This erasure mirrors the alienation of modern labor, where workers become cogs. Miyazaki critiques the 1980s-90s Japanese economic ethos: those who demand “work” without purpose (like Chihiro’s parents, who eat without permission) are punished. Only by refusing free consumption and accepting humble labor does Chihiro earn the right to exist in the spirit world.
Released in 2001 by Studio Ghibli, Hayao Miyazaki’s El Viaje de Chihiro ( Spirited Away ) is more than a coming-of-age fantasy. It is a profound meditation on identity in the face of erasure, a critique of late-stage capitalism, and a preservation of Shinto-infused Japanese folklore. The film follows ten-year-old Chihiro Ogino as she navigates the kannagi (spirit world), a bathhouse for gods, after her parents are transformed into pigs. This paper argues that Chihiro’s journey from a petulant, forgetful child to a self-possessed young heroine represents the recovery of authentic identity through labor, memory, and ecological awareness.