1st Edition

Erotic Comics in Japan An Introduction to Eromanga

By Kaoru Nagayama Copyright 2021
290 Pages
by Routledge

290 Pages
by Routledge

290 Pages
by Routledge

Comics and cartoons from Japan, or manga and anime, are an increasingly common feature of visual and popular culture around the world. While it is often observed that these media forms appeal to broad and diverse demographics, including many adults, eroticism continues to unsettle critics and has even triggered legal action in some jurisdictions. It is more urgent than ever to engage in productive... Read more
Translators' Introduction: Eromanga in the Global Now, Introduction: The Invisible Realm, Part 1: A History of Eromanga, Memes Spread, Chapter 1: The Gene Pool of Manga and Gekiga, Chapter 2: The Rise and Fall of Third-Rate Gekiga and the Eve of Bish?jo-Style Eromanga, Chapter 3: Bishojo-Style Eromanga Takes the Stage, Part 2: The Various Forms of Love and Sex, Subdividing Desire, Chapter 4: Lolicon Manga, Chapter 5: Big Breasts and Manga, Chapter 6: Little Sisters and Incest, Chapter 7: Disgrace and Training, Chapter 8: Love Stories, Chapter 9: Sadomasochism and Sexual Minorities, Chapter 10: Gender Mayhem, Part 3: Addition to the Expanded Edition (2014), Eromanga in the Twenty-First Century, Conclusion: Permeation, Diffusion and What Comes After, Pornography Without Sex, Afterword (2006), Afterword to the Expanded Edition (2014), Index of Artists and Individuals.

Biography

Patrick W. Galbraith is a Lecturer in the School of Law at Senshu University in Tokyo. He holds a Ph.D. in Information Studies from the University of Tokyo and a Ph.D. in Cultural Anthropology from Duke University. His recent publications include Otaku and the Struggle for Imagination in Japan (Duke University Press, 2019) and AKB48 (Bloomsbury, 2019). Jessica Bauwens-Sugimoto is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of International Studies at Ryukoku University in Kyoto. She holds an M.A. in Japanese Studies and an M.A. in Social and Cultural Anthropology from the Catholic University of Leuven, and an M.A. in Sociology and a Ph.D. in Human Sciences from Osaka University. Her research focus is sequential art made by and for girls and women. Nagayama Kaoru is a manga critic and activist based in Tokyo.