What is Manga and Where Did it Come From?
What is Manga?: Before I knew what manga was, I had asked myself the question that titles this section several times over the years. Yet, I apparently wasn't that interested in finding an answer-until recently. What I found, in my investigating, was extremely interesting and often surprising. The simple definition of manga is "Japanese comics" (Sanders). Yet, manga is so much more. In this one word, the "synthesis [of] a long Japanese tradition of art that entertains" is defined (Schodt 21). To better answer the question, "What is Manga?" it is best to view the entire scope of Manga and the influences that shaped it. While manga has not always been known by this name, it's existence has left an indelible mark on the past while forging a path into the future. The Ancient Manga: The earliest influences of Manga date back to ancient Japan. In the eighth century, CE, Horyuji Buddhist Temple was completely rebuilt after burning to the ground (Ito 458). When repairs were done on the temple in 1935, drawings resembling caricature figures and, according to Frederik Schodt in Manga! Manga! The World of Japanese Comics, "grossly exaggerated phalli" were discovered on wood boards taken down from the temple's ceilings (qtd. in Ito). These drawings are some of the earliest known Japanese comic art (Ito 458). During the eleventh century, CE, a priest named Toba Sojo painted what is now referred to as "the Animal Scrolls" (Ito 458). These scrolls, or "choju giga," feature rabbits, monkeys and other animals "in silly activities, including farting contests" (Aoki). This satirical look at the lives of Buddhist monks is also an early example of drawings depicting events in sequential order. When unrolled the scrolls present the images in order from right to left, a reading technique that is still employed in reading manga today (Aoki). The Toba Sojo Scrolls in their entirety are currently available for viewing online. While this type of parody and satire may seem irreverent to some, Japanese people found (and still find) great humor in Toba's scrolls. In the West, Japanese people are often stereotyped as being "serious, reserved, diligent" or "calculating, oversexed, [and] cunning" (Ito 456-7). However, according to Kinko Ito, the people of Japan "are humorous, witty and funny...once they bring down the formal façade that they project to others, especially foreigners" (457). Toba's scrolls show that this love of satire and parody have a long-standing place in the history of Japan. Manga during 1603-1867: Satire was a new beginning for manga. Satire was introduced in manga during the mid-seventeenth century, the Tokugawa period (1603-1867). There is a little story behind a well-known manga, Ostu-e: the town of Otsu near Kyoto sold Ostu-e, or "Otsu pictures," to commoners and people who were traveling on the main road from Kyoto to the north (Ito 458). According to Thatcher's Expert Day Presentation, Ostu-e began as a simple story with an inspiration of Buddhist folk art. This manga had a specific genre for prayer, as Buddha was a strong central point of their culture at the time. Tokugawa government was actively persecuting Christians and that, my friends, influenced manga to be satire, secular, and sometimes scandalous which appealed to many of the purchasers. Furthermore, during the Genroku (1688-1704) and Kyoho (1716-1736) periods, a popular manga has joined the history of manga, "Akahon." That name literally means a "red book" which has led to a genre during the two time period (Macwilliams 29). There were manga that were commonly referred to the colors of the books; those books, however, has a true genre to it, and it is folk tales and fairy tales. The colors have led a great influence for the future manga. In 1765, Harunobu Suzuki started multicolor woodblock printing which has marked the beginning of the golden age of ukiyo-e color prints. Katsuskhika Hukusai was well-known for sketches and dynamic compositions in the ukiyo-e style. The masterpieces of Hokusai's were "The Thirty-six Sceneries of Mt. Fuji" which illustrated for novels, and other paintings/drawings of beauties and samurais (MacWilliams 29). Akahon was a picture book based on fairy and folk tales such as "The Peach Boy," "The Battles of the Monkey and the Crabs," "The Sparrow's Tongue," "Click-Clack Mountain," and "How the Old Man Lost His Wen" (Ito 459). However, Akahon changed its audience from children to adults, and the book remained its consistency of pictures and not text. Manga during 1736-1912: The Meiji Era was a time period in which Japan ended the Shogun feudal system and brought back imperial rule (keldjoran). While the majority of popular manga in the 18th century satirized Japanese political figures, it wasn't until 1853, when Commodore Perry, a U.S. naval officer, introduced Japan to the western world, that manga would begin its evolution (Aoki). "Prior to [...] 1868, Japanese artists usually drew themselves with small eyes and mouths and variable proportions [...]" (Schodt, 60), but as new western ideas began to infiltrate Japanese traditional values, manga and its artists became influenced and inspired by imported artistic styles such as French and English political cartoons (keldjoran). These styles found in magazines Toba-e and The Japan Punch, soon had artists blending western comics with Japanese ideas (Aoki). "At the dawn of the 20th century, manga reflected the rapid changes in Japanese society [...]" (Aoki). Influential artists that contributed to the development of modern manga include: Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849), whose iconic woodblock printed images and sketchbooks display the best early examples of humor in Japanese art (Aoki); Rakuten Kitazawa (1876-1955), who "[...] founded Tokyo Puck, a magazine showcasing Japanese cartoonists" (Aoki); and Ippei Okamoto (1886-1948), "[...] the founder of Nippon Mangakai, the first Japanese cartoonists society" (Aoki). Manga during 1912-Present: Coming from the Meiji era to the Showa, many of the Western comics from newspaper gave the Japanese different way of expressing humor into their own forms of publications. Not only that, Japan was involved in World War I, thus it changes themes of the comic strip.Works Cited
Aoki, Deb. "Early Origins of Japanese Comics." About.com. The New York Times Company. 2010. Web. 27 Feb. 2010. Keldjoran, . "Art In Japan." Squidoo. Squidoo, LLC and respective copyright owners, Web. 3 Mar 2010. Kinko, Ito. "A History of Manga in the Context of Japanese Culture and Society." Journal of Popular Culture V. 38 No. 3 (February 2005) P. 456-475, 38.3 (2005): 456-475. Web. MacWilliams, Mark W. "Manga in Japanese History." Japanese Visual Culture Explorations in the World of Manga and Anime. Armonk: M.E Sharp, 2008. 26-47. Print. Sanders, Joe. California State University, San Bernardino. English 315 Japanese Comics and Animation. 13 Jan. 2010. Lecture. Schodt, Frederik. Dreamland: Japan: Writings on Modern Manga. Berkeley: Stone Bridge Press, 1996. Print. http://www.japanfocus.org/-Owen-Griffiths/2528 http://manga.about.com/od/historyofmanga/a/mangahistory2.htm http://www.dnp.co.jp/museum/nmp/nmp_i/articles/manga/manga3-1.html http://hem.passagen.se/animes/timeline/index.html http://www.yuricon.org/essays/10minute.html http://w00.middlebury.edu/ID085A/manga/gallery.html http://www.jai2.com/HK.htm