Books

Manga: Sixty Years of Japanese Comics

 

 

 

Manga: Sixty Years of Japanese Comics
Paul Gravett

Paperback
360 illustrations
176 pages
280 x 240 mm
ISBN 978 1 85669 391 2
$0.00
Published July 2004

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Contents

1. Irresponsible Pictures
2. Catch Up, Overtake
3. Japanese Spirit, Western Learning
4. The Father Storyteller
5. From a Darker Place
6. Boys are Forever
7. Through a Woman’s Eyes
8. Developing Maturity
9. The All-Encompassing
10. Personal Agendas
11. Culture and Imperialism

 

 

Japan's output of manga is massive, accounting for 40 per cent of everything published in the country annually. There has also been a boom in sales outside Japan, with the manga aesthetic spreading from comics into all areas of Western youth culture through film, computer games, advertising and design. This book presents an accessible, entertaining and highly illustrated introduction to the development and diversity of Japanese comics from 1945 to the present. The chapters explore topics such as: the career of Osamu Tezuka, creator of Astro Boy and originator of manga strip stories; girls' and women's comics; and the darker, more violent gekiga manga, featuring samurais and apocalyptic science fiction.

 

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Paul Gravett is a freelance journalist, curator, lecturer and broadcaster. He has curated numerous exhibitions of comic art, from the first retrospective of Carl Giles's work to 20th-anniversary celebrations of Viz.

Review

...Assisted by rich graphics and interesting facts...this engaging read is a bound-to-be bestseller.

Comics International

Review

...Gravett provides an introduction to the development and diversity of Japanese comics from 1945 to the present day, revealing in the process that manga is as varied as it is stylish.

Review

...Gravett’s ability to take the book’s remit and break it down into a format that is equally accessible to novice and diehard fans alike cannot be understated. It is a remarkable achievement, offering plenty of bang for the buck, making this book an essential purchase for any mangaphile’s library.

Neo Magazine

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