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        Andrea Horbinski
        
 
                                    
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                                            Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
 - Dedication vi
 - Contents vii
 - List of Illustrations ix
 - Acknowledgments xi
 - Note on Names, Styles, and Terms xv
 - Introduction 1
 - 
                            Part One. Origins, 1905–1928
 - Overview: Manga Against Tradition 13
 - 1 The Origins of Japanese Comics 16
 - 2 Arresting the Fleeting Moment: Manga Turns Modern 33
 - Conclusion: 1928 53
 - 
                            Part Two. Manga during wartime, 1928–1945
 - Overview: Manga During Wartime 59
 - 3 Norakuro and Friends 64
 - 4 The Manga Men 93
 - Conclusion: Eating Vegetables, Rereading Manga 122
 - 
                            Part Three. Manga in the postwar era, 1945–1963
 - Overview: Nowhere to Go but Up 127
 - 5 The Manga Pulps and the God of Manga 131
 - 6 Manga for Whom? Kashihonya, Gekiga, and the “Ban Bad Books Movement” 158
 - Conclusion: Postwar Platforms 180
 - 
                            Part Four. Tv Manga and the age of r evolution, 1963–1975
 - Overview: Shambling Toward the Postmodern 185
 - 7 Seeking Alternatives: Garo, COM, and Manga Fan Culture 190
 - 8 The Emergence of Seinen Manga and the Shōjo Revolution 218
 - Conclusion: Tankōbon: The Meaning of a Format 247
 - 
                            Part Five. Manga turns postmodern, 1975–1989
 - Overview: Applauding the DJ 253
 - 9 Something Postmodern Going On 258
 - 10 Lost in Wonderland 280
 - Conclusion: Still Preoccupied with 1989 303
 - Conclusion: A Distinctive History 307
 - Note on Sources 317
 - Glossary 319
 - Notes 323
 - Bibliography 373
 - Index 395
 
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
 - Dedication vi
 - Contents vii
 - List of Illustrations ix
 - Acknowledgments xi
 - Note on Names, Styles, and Terms xv
 - Introduction 1
 - 
                            Part One. Origins, 1905–1928
 - Overview: Manga Against Tradition 13
 - 1 The Origins of Japanese Comics 16
 - 2 Arresting the Fleeting Moment: Manga Turns Modern 33
 - Conclusion: 1928 53
 - 
                            Part Two. Manga during wartime, 1928–1945
 - Overview: Manga During Wartime 59
 - 3 Norakuro and Friends 64
 - 4 The Manga Men 93
 - Conclusion: Eating Vegetables, Rereading Manga 122
 - 
                            Part Three. Manga in the postwar era, 1945–1963
 - Overview: Nowhere to Go but Up 127
 - 5 The Manga Pulps and the God of Manga 131
 - 6 Manga for Whom? Kashihonya, Gekiga, and the “Ban Bad Books Movement” 158
 - Conclusion: Postwar Platforms 180
 - 
                            Part Four. Tv Manga and the age of r evolution, 1963–1975
 - Overview: Shambling Toward the Postmodern 185
 - 7 Seeking Alternatives: Garo, COM, and Manga Fan Culture 190
 - 8 The Emergence of Seinen Manga and the Shōjo Revolution 218
 - Conclusion: Tankōbon: The Meaning of a Format 247
 - 
                            Part Five. Manga turns postmodern, 1975–1989
 - Overview: Applauding the DJ 253
 - 9 Something Postmodern Going On 258
 - 10 Lost in Wonderland 280
 - Conclusion: Still Preoccupied with 1989 303
 - Conclusion: A Distinctive History 307
 - Note on Sources 317
 - Glossary 319
 - Notes 323
 - Bibliography 373
 - Index 395