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January 16, 2012

[SSJ: 7102] Reminder: Cultural Responses to 3.11: Manga. Sophia U., January 20th

From: David H. Slater
Date: 2012/01/16

Sophia University Series in Cultural Responses to 3.11

ART AND CULTURE OF 3.11: MANGA

*Oishinbo: Between food contamination and food tourism Ryan Holmberg, Gakushuin

*Nuclear disasters and the possibilities of shōjo
(girls') manga: The
case of Yamagishi Ryōko and Hagio Moto
Verena Maser, DIJ


Friday, January 20th, 2012; 18:30 pm
Sophia University, Yotsuya Campus
Bldg. 10, room 301
http://www.fla.sophia.ac.jp/about/location

Free and open to all
Lectures in English; discussion in English and Japanese


ABSTRACTS

*Oishinbo: Between Food Contamination and Food Tourism Ryan Holmberg, Gakushuin

Otherwise known for its fit-for-kings menu, the foodie manga Oishinbo has, since its beginning in 1983, dealt with many issues concerning the political economy and health safety of food in Japan. The manga has treated, for example, the threat to Japanese farmers and fisherman posed by industry, construction, and pollution, including contamination from the Rokkasho nuclear reprocessing plant, as well as dangers posed to Japanese consumers by environmental toxins in their foodstuffs, including imports from Europe after Chernobyl. This past summer, the manga began a new series on post-3.11 Tōhoku and the damage done to local agriculture and food culture by the earthquake and tsunami. So far, it has been relatively circumspect about food contamination after the Fukushima meltdown, resembling more the various campaigns to support Tōhoku economically and spiritually via the grocery store and through tourism. This paper will assess the recent Oishinbo series through recent discourses about food contamination and food tourism in Japan, asking what is the relation between “food after the tsunami” and “food after Fukushima.”

*Ryan Holmberg is a JSPS Postdoctoral Fellow at Gakushuin University, Tokyo. He is currently working on a book about mystery and crime manga of the 1940s and 50s.


*Nuclear disasters and the possibilities of shōjo
(girls') manga: The
case of Yamagishi Ryōko and Hagio Moto
Verena Maser, DIJ

While shōjo (girls') manga is regularly attested a potential for changing gender roles, less has been said about its possibilities in other political fields. In my presentation I will take a look at two authors' reactions to the nuclear disasters of Chernobyl and Fukushima. Yamagishi Ryōko in 1988 used her manga to alert readers to the dangers of nuclear energy and urged to end Japan's dependence on this power source. Hagio Moto in 2011 on the other hand draws a connection between two girls, one from Fukushima and one from Chernobyl to give hope to her readers that the future might be brighter than it looks right now. While different in content, both stories received a lot of attention from media as well as readers all over Japan, attesting to the political possibilities of shōjo manga.

Verena Maser is a PhD student at the German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ). She is currently working on her PhD thesis about love between girls in manga.

--
David H. Slater, Ph.D.
Faculty of Liberal Arts
Sophia University, Tokyo

Approved by ssjmod at 01:37 PM