Gekiga
Gekiga (劇") is
Japanese for "dramatic pictures." The term was coined by
Yoshihiro Tatsumi and adopted by other more serious Japanese cartoonists who did not want their trade to be known as
manga or "irresponsible pictures". It's akin to
Will Eisner who started calling his
comics "
graphic novels" as opposed to "
comic books" for the same reason.
Tatsumi began publishing "gekiga" in
1957. Gekiga was vastly different from most manga at the time which were aimed at children. These "dramatic pictures" emerged not from the mainstream manga publications in Tokyo headed by
Osamu Tezuka but from the lending libraries based out of
Osaka. The lending library industry tolerated more experimental and offensive works to be published than the mainstream "Tezuka camp" during this time period.
By the late
1960s and early
1970s the children who grew up reading manga wanted something aimed at older audiences and gekiga provided for that niche. In addition this particular generation came to be known as the manga generation and read manga as a form of rebellion (which was similar to the role rock and roll played for
hippies in the
United States). Manga reading was particularly common in the 1960s among anti-
U.S.-Japan Security Treaty and Labor oriented student protest groups at this time. These youth became known in Japan as being the "
manga generation".
Because of the growing popularity of these originally underground comics, even
Osamu Tezuka began to display the influence of gekiga cartoonists in works such as
Hi no Tori (
Phoenix), produced in the early 1970s, and especially in
Adolf, produced in the early
1980s.
Adolf has heavy influences from Tatsumi's artwork, with more realistic styling and darker settings than most of Tezuka's work. In turn Tatsumi was influenced by Tezuka though storytelling techniques.
Not only was the storytelling in gekiga more serious but also the style was more realistic. Gekiga constitute the work of first generation of Japanese
alternative cartoonists. Despite the original goals of gekiga to provide more realistic more mature stories, some authors abused this original defintion to produce works that only contained shock factor.
As a result of Tezuka adopting gekiga styles and storytelling, there was an acceptance of a wide diversity of experimental stories into the mainstream comic market commonly referred to critics as being the
Golden Age of Manga. This started in the
1970s and continued into the 1980s. It gradually ended as mainstream
shōnen magazines became increasingly more commercialized.
More recently the most mainstream
shōnen publications have lost a lot of gekiga influence and these kinds of works are now found in slightly more underground publications (usually
seinen magazines). In addition other artistic movements have emerged in
alternative manga like the emergence of the avant-garde magazine
Garo around the time of gekiga's acceptance into the mainstream manga market and the much later
Nouvelle Manga movement. These movements have superseded gekiga as
alternative comics in Japan.
*
Yoshihiro Tatsumi*
Ryoichi Ikegami*
Hirohiko Araki*
Tetsuo Hara*
Takao Saitou (of
Golgo 13 fame)
Drawn and Quarterly Volume 5. Ed. Chris Oliveros Montreal, Quebec: Drawn & Quarterly, 2003. pg 59 ISBN 1-896597-61-0.
*Schodt, Frederik L.
Dreamland Japan: Writings on Modern Manga. Berkeley, Calif.: Stone Bridge Press, 1996. ISBN 188065623X.
*Schodt, Frederik L.
Manga! Manga!: The World of Japanese Comics. New York: Kodansha International, 1983. ISBN 870117521, ISBN 4770023057.