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manga

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(thing) by Wintersweet (1.1 y) (print)   ?   1 C! I like it! Wed Feb 16 2000 at 2:35:14

One of the most notable aspects of manga is its wider range of genre and target audience/demographics.

There are far more selections for females--elementary school, junior high, high school, college, and adult--in manga than in English-language comics. Shoujo manga refers to a relatively small subset of this group, but when used outside of Japan frequently indicates the entire range. And no, they're not all romance stories. They include thoughtful science fiction, sports action, fantasy, etc. etc. (Oh, and also soft porn. So much for the Euro-Americocentric idea that women are turned on verbally, men are turned on visually.)

Manga artists (usually, but not always, also the writers) tend to employ more advanced storytelling techniques. For an interesting analysis, see Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud. Other interesting books include Manga! Manga! and Dreamland Japan, both by Frederick L. Schodt.

(idea) by randir (1.1 mon) (print)   ?   I like it! Mon May 28 2001 at 23:34:44

Manga, with an emphasis on the second syllable, means mango in the Tagalog language. It is pronounced mung-GA.

Though it makes use of the letter ng, the second syllable is actually pronounced with an initiating 'g' sound. This is perhaps to differentiate it from another Tagalog word, mga, which is pronounced as one word, muh-nga, making use of that ng character.

Manga is also the Spanish and Portugese word for sleeve.


(idea) by Juuichiketajin (6.1 y) (print)   ?   I like it! Tue Feb 12 2002 at 7:16:53

Manga can be appreciated on different levels.

NOTE: To do this, you must be able to read kana, but no knowledge of Japanese beyond this is required. In fact, it is probably better if you have none.

One way to do it is this. Get a manga that is about absolutely nothing at all. The less it's about, the better. Make sure it has plenty of pretty pictures. And it must have furigana.

Lie down. Open your manga to the first page (the page at the "back", Japanese read "back" to "front", like Semites). It probably has a pretty picture. Look at it. "Aaa, kawaii".

Go to the next page. Read the text aloud. Try to get the voices right. It is good to sound silly. Keep reading and looking at the pictures.

This is a perfect activity for when your brain needs rest.


(thing) by gloinson (4 mon) (print)   ?   2 C!s I like it! Mon Feb 18 2002 at 17:16:38

The word manga was first coined by Hokusai Katsushika, an artist of the ukiyo-e school of Japanese woodblock printing. The word has been translated into English as "random sketches", "cartoons", "sketches from life", and "drawing things just as they come". Hokusai's Manga, a series of 15 volumes was published between 1814 and 1879 (30 years after the artist's death), and depicted, in sketch form, a variety of subjects from animals, to architecture, to common people going about their everyday lives.

While the word manga comes from Hokusai (as does the quick brushwork that is typical of most modern manga), modern manga's present style is derived more from newspaper comic strips. The first serialized comic strip in Japan was Tagosaku to Mokube no Tokyo Kembutsu (Tagosaku and Mokube Sightseeing in Tokyo). In 1902 the strip was created by Rakuten Kitazawa for the color newspaper supplement Jiji Manga. The supplement was modeled on American sections of the time.

Rakuten Kitazawa traveled abroad studying cartooning as it was flourishing in the United States, as did Ippei Okamoto, a Japanese political and social cartoonist, who was so enamored with what he saw at the New York World newspaper that when he returned to Japan he wrote articles on the most popular comic strips in the United States at the time: George McManus' Bringing Up Father and Bud Fisher's Mutt and Jeff. It was these articles that spurred the translation and serialization of these and other American strips into Japanese newspapers in the 1920s leading to the spread of comics as a popular artform in Japan.

After World War II changes in publishing in Japan as well as looser laws regarding what could be printed led to the rise of new comics magazines in Japan. Some labeled shonen manga were aimed at young boys while others labeled shojo (or shoujo) manga were aimed at girls.

Probably the most important of the new wave manga artists in the late 1940s was Osamu Tezuka, a young medical student whose comics became so successful and well revered in Japan that the majority of those who followed him were somehow influenced by his work. Tezuka's art was far more dynamic than the manga that had come before it. He experimented with page layouts. Influenced by American animation from the Disney and Fleischer studios Tezuka's work shows action and movement. His creations Tetsuwan-Atomu and Jungle Taitei were later animated and released throughout the world. They became respectively known in the United States as Astro Boy and Kimba the White Lion.

Like the work of Tezuka, today's manga varies greatly in subject matter, from science fiction to history, from fantasy to autobiography, however unlike the work of Hokusai it is entirely narrative. The majority of modern manga is still produced using brush and ink or pen and ink techniques that have been the standard for comic strips since their conception.

Joining Tezuka on the list of those that many consider to be masters of modern manga are Katsuhiro Otomo (creator of Akira) and Kazuo Koike and Goseki Kojima (creators of Lone Wolf and Cub). Not to be overlooked are Rumiko Takahashi (creator of Ranma 1/2), Hiroaki Samura (creator of Blade of the Immortal), Masamune Shirow (creator of Ghost in the Shell), and Leiji Matsumoto (creator of Captain Harlock).


Sources:
Julia Meech-Pekarik, The World of the Meiji Print: Impressions of a New Civilization, Weatherhill, New York and Tokyo, 1986.
James Michener, The Hokusai Sketchbooks Selections From the Manga, Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1958.
Yone Noguchi, Hokusai, Elkin Matthews, 1925.
Frederik L. Schodt, Manga! Manga! The World Of Japanese Comics, Kodansha International, 1983.


(thing) by atesh (1.2 mon) (print)   ?   1 C! I like it! Thu Mar 08 2001 at 23:30:33

Manga is the Japanese word for "comics." It has come into use in America as the word to use when referring to Japanese comics, be they translated or not.

This list contains all of the manga that I could find on e2. If you find any manga that is not contained on the list, please /msg me. Thank you!

Recently, the anime and manga section of 00100's Everything Japanese Encyclopedia has been integrated with the anime and manga nodes.

anime/manga is a new usergroup that should be similar to groups like e2comix and e2film. Discussions of anime and manga and nodevertising of anime and manga nodes will be the main part of this group. Join now by /msging me, atesh.

If you're looking for non-Japanese comics, you might want to check out comics.

Artists/Writers (mangaka): Characters: Genres: Publishers: Extras:

printable version
chaos

hentai anime Hikaru no Go Ghost in the Shell
anime vs manga Oh My Goddess! Sailor Moon furigana
Akira Neon Genesis Evangelion Tiger Mask You're Under Arrest!
Nausicaä of the Valley of Wind Women are turned on verbally, men are turned on visually Japan omake
kana Battle Angel Alita softcore porn Hotohori
Understanding Comics guro Inuyasha Area 88
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