This edited volume explores political motives, discourses and agendas in Japanese manga and graphic art with the objective of highlighting the agency of Japanese and wider Asian story-telling traditions within the context of global political traditions.
Roman Rosenbaum PhD is an Honorary Associate at the University of Sydney Australia. He specialises in Postwar Japanese Literature and Popular Cultural Studies. He is the editor of Representation of Japanese History in Manga (2013) and Visions of Precarity in Japanese Popular Culture and Literature (2015).
1. Introduction 2. Re-envisioning the Dark Valley and the Decline of the Peace State 3. Kobayashi Yoshinori's Just War and Unjust Peace:Sens¿ ron, Arrogant-ism, and Selective Memory 4. "Sexual Politics: Pan-Pan Girls in Postwar Manga and Magazine Illustrations" 5. NEETs vs. Nuns: Visualizing the Moral Panic of Japanese Conservatives 6. The Body Political: Women and War in Kantai Collection 7. Towards an Unrestrained Military: Manga Narratives of the Self-Defense Forces 8. The political representation of Hiroshima in the Graphic Art of K¿no Fumiyo 9. "What Tezuka Might Tell Trump: Critiquing Japanese Uniqueness in Gringo" 10. Questioning the politics of popular culture: Tatsuta Kazuto's manga 1F and the national discourse on 3/11 11. Database Nationalism: The Disaggregation of Nation, Nationalism, and Symbol in Pop Culture 12. Envisioning Nuclear Futures: Shiriagari Kotobuki's 3/11 manga from Hope to Despair 13. Kokoro (¿): Civic epistemology of self-knowledge in Japanese war-themed manga 14. Conclusion