Manga

...bibliographic notes about manga...

Category: News (page 5 of 8)

Focus on Shōjo Manga: 美內すずえ MIUCHI Suzue

Although Miuchi Suzue published other works, such as Amaterasu, she is best known for Garasu no Kamen (Glass Mask), a gripping story of Kitajima Maya’s struggles as she achieves success in the theatrical world, told through 49 volumes published since 1976.

It has been the basis for TV dramas and anime productions.

Her publisher, Hakusensha, now offers open access to the first volume online, convinced that readers will be so captivated by the story that they will want to purchase the rest of the volumes!

Note: This is one of a series of posts related to the exhibit: World of Shojo Manga: Mirrors of Girls’ Desires (March 28 – July 5).

Focus on Shōjo Manga: 水野英子 MIZUNO Hideko

Tokiwa-so Apartment

Model of the Tokiwa-so Apartment where Tezuka Osamu, Mizuno Hideko and other mangaka lived in Tokyo’s Toshima Ward

This is the fourth in a series of posts related to the upcoming exhibit at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum:  World of Shojo Manga: Mirrors of Girls’ Desires (March 28, 2015 – July 5, 2015). A small rotating exhibit on the 3rd floor of Thompson Library highlights cartoonists who will be included in the exhibit!

Mizuno Hideko was the only female mangaka to live at Tokiwa-so Apartment, a kind of atelier where several famous cartoonists lived during 1952 ~ 1980.  They collected their memories and cartoons about life there for a book, Tokiwasō seishun monogatari, of which the Billy Ireland Library & Museum holds three editions. The building no longer exists, but a model of it has been set up (see picture) as part of the Tokiwa-so Street Project aimed at regional revitalization and urban development utilizing the manga culture in Toshima Ward of Tokyo.  For people visiting the site there is now a “Tokiwa-so Oyasumidokoro” where works by the cartoonists are available to browse and various events are held.

Ohio State University Libraries holds several works by Mizuko Hideko, but her most famous titles, such as Fire! ファイヤー!(first shojo manga with a male protagonist (rock star)– published 1969-1971), are still on our desiderata list!

 

Manga at a Crossroads symposia (Mar 6 & Apr 4) and exhibit — World of Shojo Manga: Mirrors of Girls’ Desires (Mar 28 – July 5)

 

Matsumoto Leiji (Reiji) Akira. Aoi Hanabira.

Upcoming exhibit at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum” World of Shojo Manga: Mirrors of Girls’ Desires (March 28, 2015 – July 5, 2015)

Exhibit features 12 mangaka: Watanabe Masako, Leiji (Reiji) Akira Matsumoto,  Mizuno Hideko, Maki MiyakoSatonaka Machiko , Miuchi Suzue,  Hagio Moto, Kuramochi FusakoYoshida Akimi, Okano Reiko, Ima Ichiko, Yoshinaga Fumi

Also, two symposia will be held:

MANGA at A CROSSROADS: SYMPOSIUMS I & II

Symposium 1: Manga at a Crossroads: Classic Manga!  ( Friday March 6):
12:00 pm – 4:30pm, Thompson Library, Room 165, OSU campus
Event link        Flyer (click to zoom on image)     Flyer (pdf) Continue reading

Oct 27 Rare Manga Open House in today’s Lantern

 Aso Yutaka's Nonki no Tosan (Easy-going daddy)

Aso Yutaka’s Nonki na Tōsan (Easy-going daddy)

In today’s Lantern, Desiaire Rickman writes about the Rare Manga Open House that will be taking place on Monday:  Ohio State exhibit to showcase largest manga collection in US

Yomiuri Sandē Manga

SAMSUNG CAMERA PICTURES

Yomiuri Sunday Manga February 8, 1931

 

So excited with this acquisition of 40 issues of Yomiuri Sandē Manga 讀賣サンデー漫画 from 1930-31!! Not widely held at all — National Diet Library lists one issue http://iss.ndl.go.jp/books/R100000002-I025061947-00

As explained in this brief survey of newspaper manga (Newspark), after Jiji Manga (of which Ohio State has an almost complete set (1921-31) (+ 1927 issues) — and which we have started indexing on the wiki), Yomiuri Sandē Manga was one of the most successful pre-World War II manga publications. Cartoonists who published in Yomiuri Sandē Manga included:

Note: Vol. 12 of Manga Zasshi Hakubutsukan includes selected reprints from Yomiuri Sandē Manga.

Focus on Shōjo Manga: わたなべまさこ Watanabe Masako

WATANABE Masako, born in 1929, is the oldest of 12 cartoonists featured in the shojo manga exhibit curated by Professor Masami Toku (Art and Art History Department, California State University at Chico), that will be coming to Ohio State’s Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum next spring: March 28 – July 5, 2015.

Since there are 12 mangaka in the exhibit, I decided to blog about one of them each month starting now. In addition, a small exhibit on the 3rd Floor of Thompson Library will highlight selected works by these mangaka in a rotating exhibit.

Image: Garasu no shiro ガラスの城 (Glass Castle) in November 2, 1969 issue of Shūkan Magaretto 週間マーガレット1969年11月2日号 の画像

Continue reading

The Great War exhibit in Thompson Library Gallery through Sept 7 — includes manga sugoroku!

1915sugoroku_20140108_161821a

1918sugoroku_20140311_1328471

An exhibit in Thompson Library’s Gallery on World War I includes two examples of manga sugoroku (board games) from that era (published 1915-17)! See a short video and my post on the Info-Lit Toolkit blog:
BLOG: Visual Culture: Japan & the Asiatic Theatre.
VIDEO: Sugoroku: Japanese Board Games of the World War I Era

 

Note: Exhibit includes reproductions of these games — come by and play!

 

Ohio State’s manga collection size

I’ve posted about growth of the manga collection before, but had some questions about this recently.  So here’s an update!

Annual figures for volumes/issues (item records) of Japanese language manga cataloged as part of the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum since 1999 are below.  Records for these works are all available in the Ohio State University Libraries catalog. A browsable search is currently available by searching on keyword=manga and location =Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum.

What signs indicate that a manga will be ending?

Ken Yasumoto-Nicolson of What Japan Thinks has posted results of a Goo Ranking survey of manga readers in Japan:

You know a manga series is coming to an end when…

The poll was conducted by goo Research monitor group, with over half of the respondents in their 30s and 40s. Also, over 60% were female.

After reading this poll I find myself wondering what series will be ending soon?

At the same time, it is good to know that future researchers will be able to test these poll results against the publications themselves, as we build up a collection of manga magazines at Ohio State! (See the new collection development policy for details.)

Manga Collection Development Policy

Photo of Manga Magazines taken by Nunocardoso

Manga Magazines by Nunocardoso

Change is coming for users of Ohio State’s manga collection!  

A new Manga Collection Development Policy has just been developed, creating two collections:

  • Manga in the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum.  Complementing the primary collecting areas of the BICL&M, the manga collection focuses on manga magazines and newspapers, original artwork by manga artists, and translated manga.
  • Manga in the general circulating collections:
    1. Manga.  Broadly representative collection focusing on well-known manga titles and examples of various genres.
    2. Secondary sources on manga and anime.  History and criticism monographs, cartoonists’ biographies and autobiographies, reference works, guides to manga, and related works are collected extensively.
    3. Translations of manga into English are collected selectively as duplicates of holdings in the BICL&M.

What does this mean for users of the manga collection?  At the moment, nothing has changed.   However, wheels are starting to turn which will eventually change many of currently-non-circulating manga housed in the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum into items that can be borrowed from the general Japanese language collections!   Please read the full policy for (some) details about what will become part of the circulating collection and what will stay in the special collections of the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Musuem.

When the change is made,  manga available for circulation will also be available for interlibrary loan.

Important note:  This will take time……   We have a lot of other work to do in the Libraries….  Please be patient!  This is a big change for us…

 

 

 

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