Manga addresses nuclear meltdown
Updated: 2014-07-02 09:42
By Elaine Lies in Tokyo (China Daily/Agencies)
|
||||||||
"Movies take a lot of money and backers tend to flinch away from this topic ... Manga are a lot more independent and can go where even news programs might hesitate," says Kenichiro Shinohara, an editor at the popular "Morning" manga weekly where Ichi Efu is also published.
There are several hundred manga published in Japan each year, ranging from cute to violent and pornographic, in magazine and book form.
Fukushima manga run the gamut from Sobamon, which promotes the safety of Fukushima produce, to the overtly anti-nuclear Fighting the Nuclear Demon. At least one is set in the future.
Though manga began trickling out shortly after the disaster took place, it wasn't until April that most of the nation became aware of them, thanks to a food manga called Oishinbo (The Gourmet) and a Fukushima food safety series.
In it, several characters suffered nosebleeds they blamed on radiation exposure - a situation that medical experts say is highly unlikely but something they have not ruled out. The manga also said the Fukushima area would be unlivable for years.
This unleashed a flood of angry comments from Fukushima residents to Abe and other cabinet ministers, who called for people to use "correct" information, in turn setting off discussions about free speech and government cover-ups.
"Of course manga are written so they're easy to understand in one glance, which does make it possible for things to be taken wrong and rumors to be born," says Kazuma Yoshimura, head of the Manga Research Center at Kyoto's Seika University.
The editor of the manga apologized for some word choices but remained unrepentant about running it, citing fading interest in Fukushima and the need for more discussion about the issue.
- Star Stefanie Sun holds concert in Beijing
- Faye Wong's manager refutes star's drug rumors
- Lu Yi and daughter Bei Er pose for street snaps
- Photoshoots of actress Li Xiaomeng
- Council of Fashion Designers of America Awards
- Fan Bingbing, first Chinese actress in Barbie Hall of Fame
- Awarding ceremony of 2014 hito Pop Music held in Taipei
- Zhao Liying's photo shoot for Children's Day
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Xi attends BRICS summit |
China helps fight international war on drugs |
Crackdown on terrorist attacks |
My China Story: Meeting the master |
Tongues tied around tatu-bola |
A market that's not such a hot property |
Today's Top News
Ex-security chief Zhou Yongkang under probe
Prudence urged over solar dispute
US visa delays likely to continue
McDonald's fishing for supplier
OSI group to fund food safety
China's FDI in US set for increase
Glitch delays visas for US-bound students
A musical spoof of the Clinton years
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |