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11-04-2008, 03:52 AM
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11-12-2008, 05:51 AM
Manga peaked in the late '80's and early 90's. The sales have fallen by almost 30 percent as young people find other electronic forms of entertainment. American comics are becoming more popular due to movies like bat-man and Iron-man. American companies are currrently producing movie forms of popular manga, such as Akira. When American and other non-japanese move into the market, will it no longer be "manga?" Does it have to be Japanese to be manga, or can it just follow the patterns and stories of "manga"....
sushi is sushi no matter where it's cut (although much better in Japan, it's still sushi). Rock and roll and blues are still rock and bues whn played by non americans (not as good, but stil rock or blues)...... |
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11-12-2008, 06:16 AM
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I don't know if we want to open the can of worms argument of what is anime and manga, but when someone asks "What do you think of the Star Trek manga?" I think "Oh, there was a Japanese produced comic book of Star Trek." This is true of Batman, Spiderman, Star Wars... but I never heard of a Star Trek manga made in Japan. And if he means an American-produced comic in English for Americans, that's called a "comic". If it's an American-produced animated TV show in English for Americans, that's called a "cartoon". |
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11-12-2008, 06:22 AM
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Generally, folkore follows the same patterns universally. Trends in art are universally reproducable. Why is manga and anime different? |
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11-12-2008, 06:38 AM
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Simply put, I don't think it takes a Japanese "hand" to make Japanese-"style" artwork...obviously not. People from Korea to Oklahoma have spent a long time imitating and perfecting the "style" of manga. (As an aside, I put "style" in quotes because there is this sense there is a singular manga "style", which couldn't be further from the truth. It would be like saying all American movies are in the same "style". Sure there are a lot of big-budget action movies that get a lot of attention, but the majority of American movies are not big-budget action features, just as the majority of Japanese manga is not big-eyed nymph sprite harems.) But the artwork is only a part of manga. There is also the story...and the culture that makes that story work. I read manga to get that unadultrated peek into the window of Japanese culture. Right now I am reading BLACK JACK, and so much of the short stories are dripping in culture. It's about a renegade doctor who actually tells his patients they are going to die. This is normal in the US, but in Japan is a taboo. He is lambasted by other doctors for doing so. So you can say folklore follows the same universal themes, and that might be true, but I am talking about the details. Manga is the Japanese word for "comics" and there is no reason for English-speakers to describe their English comics as "manga" in English. |
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11-12-2008, 06:41 AM
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