Forum - View topicManga and American Comics
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MisterEd
Posts: 97 |
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After reading manga for about 4 years, I realized that some of the titles I was buying regularly were complete trash. Throw-away Shonen Jump series and the like were cluttering up my shopping cart. I'm surprised it took me so long to notice that I didn't even like 1/4 of the manga I was reading.
I've enjoyed real books, novels, memoirs, short stories, so it's amazing that it took me so long to figure out that I'd like American comics. I just figured that the industry was dominated by the superhero driven DC and Marvel. Regardless, I went to my local comic shop prepared to give Superman and Spiderman a chance. When I asked the clerk where to start, he asked me what other titles I liked. When I said that the comics I read consisted mainly of manga, he didn't point me to the Batman trade paperbacks, instead, he introduced me to a title called Chew, published by Image. I had no idea Image even existed. They specialize in creator owned titles that don't switch writers and artists after only a couple issues (Ironically, since my enlightenment, I have read, and enjoyed, quite a few DC/Marvel books). Series like Invincible, The Walking Dead, Elephantmen, Morning Glories, and Irredeemable (published by Boom!) would absolutely appeal to manga fans. I never actively disliked American comics, I just always figured that they only centered around outdated, tired characters dressed in tights. Then I realized that American Comic fans must look at manga and see big headed, wide eyed tweens dressed in maid outfits looking too innocent for their own good. Initially I was wary about buying issues by the month, so I don't. Just like my manga, I purchase American comics in bound, trade paperback form. In reality, comic fans are comic fans, and they should embrace both styles. I guarantee you that everyone on this site could find an American comic worth reading. Now that I've broadened my tastes, I can really enjoy every series that I read. |
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Amibite
Posts: 196 |
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The thing is they are dominated by superhero titles. Sure, there's a few non cape books here and there, but they're honestly not all that much better. American comics are very stagnant and stuck in one type of genre and demographic. You're not going to find an extremely popular and long running series like One Piece which is light-hearted and adventurous (or any other Shounen Jump title for that matter): Veritgo, Image, and other non superhero books tend to go for the grim and gritty things sort of like how most American live-action shows are about crime dramas and such.
(Don't even attempt to find American equivalent to shoujo and josei) I tried getting into US comics long ago, but got burned out pretty quickly. Superheroes are a waste of time, but even going beyond that I found very little worth reading and nothing very good. I just saw the market as being too stagnant and pigeonholed, and all the styles and feelings felt regurgitated and samey. |
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Bonham
Posts: 424 Location: NYC |
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ikillchicken
Posts: 7272 Location: Vancouver |
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Gosh, it is so great to see someone avoid falling into this particular pitfall. Yes, you're absolutely right. Superhero comics are really not all that different from the negative, over publicized moe blob face of manga. They are, generally, pretty terrible and totally impenetrable to those who aren't already hardcore fans. Still, there's so much more out there that people conveniently dismiss. Especially over the last decade or two there has been such an explosion of non-superhero comics. Forget DC and Marvel and check out anything from Image, Dark Horse, Vertigo or one of the other smaller publishers. If you limit yourself to just manga there is so much great stuff that you're needlessly missing out on.
Aaaaand predictably, the first response is exactly the same kind of tired, self serving ignorance that you see spewed by anime/manga fans all too often. The irony of course is that the fools spewing this nonsense are always the first ones to lose their shit should anyone suggest that manga is tired and stale because it's dominated by otaku titles. Cause of course, your hobby is totally the bastion of creativity unlike those other things you don't like which are exactly the negative stereotype people say they are. Well, whatever. There's no arguing with the wilfully ignorant. |
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Jessica Hart
Posts: 219 |
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The only one 'losing their crap' seems to be you (and Bonham, to a lesser extent, though he used dripping sarcasm rather than personal insults like you did) But um... here's your chance to preach American comic's being creative. Can you actually name some comics about football? Card games? How about spinning tops? Some magical girl? Romance (bonus points for homosexual romance)? Transgender issues? Say I wanted to read stuff like Sailor Moon and Tokyo Mew Mew.. what would you recommend? Also try to keep it within the last year ot two, since Bonham had to resort to obscure self-published-out-of-the-author's-own-basement titles from 30 years ago to try to prove a point, so I think stagnant is a good word to use... I just looked at the top selling comics for the month and it took me until #127 or so to get to a non-superhero/Marvel/DC comic.. and that was a Star Wars comic. and by that point on the list it's barely selling. Though the top selling manga in both Japan and America are vastly varied in terms of themes and age level, so it'd be wrong to say the same thing about manga... no one genre dominates the industry like comics. You can't criticize manga the same way you can American comics, they're too different. So the whole 'moe otaku only' comment of yours has no basis and is untrue, unlike the common criticism of US comics being mostly superheroes.... |
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Bonham
Posts: 424 Location: NYC |
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Actually, it would be far more useful to ask: what American comics have you read and do you own? |
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Amibite
Posts: 196 |
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Hense why I used the word 'few'. Superheroes aren't the ONLY thing, but they do make up 99% of the market.
Putting Bone on the same platform on One Piece doesn't work. It's like using Adventure Time to say the US makes adventure cartoons. The scale, quality, and purpose of each is vastly different.
It's not exactly a belief held only by manga fans. The whole world in general dislikes US comics.. that's why manga is so widespread around the globe and American comics are not. They offer what the US cannot.
Except everything I said is completely true. Superheroes are the primary force in the market, you can't deny this without presenting some serious market data analysis. You're creating a false positive by trying to prove a similar point with manga that simply isn't true. No one says that about manga from what I've seen, outside people who generally hate cartoons/comics in general and aren't worth dealing with in the first place. Well maybe comic fans say it, I don't talk to them much, but I figure it's just out of jealousy or bitterness at how widespread manga has become in recent times, or it's not 'good old American comics' to begin with. The top manga in Japan is One Piece.. I'm not sure how that's moeblob in the slightest. From what I've seen, most people misuse the word moeblob to describe things they don't like, so when they resort to vague buzzwords with no actual meaning, they don't have much of a point. "Superhero" is a specific and definable genre. "Moeblob" is still being argued over and thrown around with what it actually means and people argue over it all the time. If you want to reword that statement into something more concrete, then feel free and we can continue from there. |
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Bonham
Posts: 424 Location: NYC |
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I'll also ask you the same question I asked above: what are some of the titles that you've read?
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Amibite
Posts: 196 |
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Some quick math just by browsing a listing of what the Top 100 comics each month are on IcV2. http://www.icv2.com/articles/news/20795.html
The thing is saying shounen or shoujo dominates manga isn't like saying superhero does. Shounen and shoujo are demographics, while superhero is a genre. For example, for shounen you have action series like Naruto, One Piece, and Bleach. Comedy, like Sket Dance and Gintama. Romance like Midori no Hibi and Ichigo 100%. Drama like Death Note and Bakuman, and so forth. Even among the titles in the same genre, Naruto and One Piece are vastly different from one another (a lighthearted show about pirates with extraordinary abilities in old times having adventures VS a more dark show about ninjas in a war mixed with modern technology and a 'magic' system) Superheroes are general fighting crime in a modern city, with the same conventions as always and no real variety between them other than Punisher and Batman are more brooding while Spider-Man cracks jokes.
If you mean non-superhero, then I browsed through 100 Bullets, Exterminators, Y The Last Man, Fables, and other Vertigo titles back in the day. Weren't really my cup of tea. Also used to read Walking Dead but got disinterested as it went on and after that lame plot twist they pulled.
I was thinking more One Piece and ilk are focused on the high octane action and drama with an epic-scale story, while Bone is more like a Disney movie it's execution. Action is one of the things I like about manga, it's more expanded upon and the powers seem to be used in a lot more creative and interesting ways that I never really saw in comics, which seem to lack the impact action manga does. Along with the way it's drawn and panel lay-out and all that stuff. |
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Bonham
Posts: 424 Location: NYC |
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ikillchicken
Posts: 7272 Location: Vancouver |
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I don't deny this. I deny that "there's a few non cape books here and there, but they're honestly not all that much better. American comics are very stagnant and stuck in one type of genre and demographic". There are vastly more than a "few" non superhero comics out there. The fact that you claim this is the case totally invalidates all your later claims about supposed stagnation. If you're only familiar with a few non superhero comics then you simply know next to nothing about American comics.
Okay. Define it. I hesitate to draw us off topic here since this really has little bearing on the topic at hand but specifically define "Superhero comic". |
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Tamaria
Posts: 1512 Location: De Achterhoek |
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You may want to turn your head towards Europe for that one. W.I.T.C.H has been partly translated to English and if you're into stuff like Sailor Moon and Tokyo Mew Mew you'll probably love it. But yeah, American comics don't have much stuff for girls. Only recent attempt I can think of is MINX and that line was swiftly euthanised. |
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Amibite
Posts: 196 |
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Well, you have to at least admit that's a hard pill to swallow when they made up the bulk of that list there. It's like, where exactly are they then?
I wouldn't really say that's the case, though. True, One Piece is the top dog, but even the Top 10 in Japan alone shows a lot of diversity. You got Naruto and One Piece, sure, and I guess FMA if you count that in the same group (though all three are vastly different in setting and style), but you also got Kimi ni Todoke (Shoujo slice-of-life/romance), Nodame Cantabile (Shoujo musical-themed drama/romance), Saint Young Men (Seinen comedy with social/religious satire), Shingeki no Kyojin (Shounen post-apocalyptic horror), Yotsuba (Shounen slice-of-life comedy), Bakuman (Shounen drama), and Real (seinen drama on paraplegics) All very different from one another. You'd definitely see even more diversity if you expand it out to the top 100.
I'm more of an anime person honestly, I only read manga if the anime ends long before the manga (Soul Eater, Negima, etc) or it seems really interesting and I see it, though given a lot of anime are based on manga, I suppose you can count the stuff I watch.
Again, kind of hard to say that when you have that list there saying otherwise. And something to consider: even if there's a hundred thousand more non superhero books out there. if they're so unpopular and obscure to be on that list (like 100 self-printed copies sold a a convention), then you can't really say they're apart of the actual market, if you think about it.
It'd be easy to just say Marvel/DC stuff, but other companies make them too (like Spawn and Hellboy or whatever) But in general it's usually comics that tend to take place in modern society (or a gimmicky other time, like when Marvel did those colonial versions of heroes) and deal with people who go around stopping crime in that city and stuff. They usually actually use the word 'superhero' and those other terms in-universe. A lot of times they wear costumes, though some don't if they're more 'street level'. Basically it's just a common writing style and handling of stories, heroes, and villains that you find prevalent in American media (villains tend be handled in a 'rogues gallery' kind of fashion), and not just comics.. a lot of action cartoons are handled that way, like Ben 10 and Danny Phantom. It's a huge cultural preference for America. |
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MisterEd
Posts: 97 |
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At a certain point you need to ask yourself, "why would I want to read a comic about spinning tops? And for homosexual romance you should read Strangers in Paradise. I guarantee you it has more substance than most Shojo Beat titles.
Isn't that the list of top selling monthly comic books though? It'd be much more interesting to see the top selling trade paperbacks. And if even though the market is dominated by superhero titles, doesn't mean all superhero titles are the same. Invincible, Irredeemable, Spawn, and the Astounding Wolf Man, just to name a few, turn the genre on its head. Imagine all the Shonen series that somehow involve improbable fighting tournaments. Does that make them all the same? And regarding originality, there are some very new and individual concepts floating around the comic book industry. Chew is about a detective who can eat something, i.e. a body, and tell what has happened to it. That's just the gist of the story, it gets a little complicated. Elephantmen, The Walking Dead, The Goon, Hellboy, and Morning Glories are just as original. |
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ikillchicken
Posts: 7272 Location: Vancouver |
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Well, this seems like common sense to me but if they're not in the top 300 then they're somewhere in the #301+ range. It's a top sellers list. Surely you don't look at the New York Times bestseller list and assume these are the only books that exist. Look, if you want specific non-superhero titles just google Vertigo or check out Image, DarkHorse or a half dozen other small publishers. Those aren't some dude in his basement printing off copies of his indie comic. Those are real professional publishing companies. Also, some other points about that list: -In addition to MisterEd's very good point about it being a monthly list it also notes at the top that it's based on sales at comics specialty stores which will probably skew towards weekly superhero comic fans. -If you scroll down past the top 100 or so there are actually dozens of comics on that very list that are in no way superhero comics. -Once again, nobody is disputing that superhero comics sell. In no way does that prevent anyone from reading less popular, non-superhero comics.
Look, I don't really think anyone even much disagrees with this. You're probably right. Manga is more diverse overall. This is primarily due to the manga industry also catering heavily to girls, something western comics don't really do very often. What I object to is this silly idea that because western comics aren't as diverse they must therefore be very stagnant and trapped almost entirely in the superhero genre. This leap in reasoning is completely unjustified.
So it's comics (except when it's not) published by marvel/DC (except when they aren't) that take place in modern society (except when they don't) and that use the term superhero (except when they don't) and have characters wearing costumes (except when they don't) and rogue style villains (except when it doesn't). So...the only actual definite criteria you put forth is...they deal with people who go around stopping crime in the city and stuff. ... ... Wow. Superheros really are huge in America. Or do those not meet your 'specific and definable' criteria of "and stuff". See, this is exactly my point. You complain about me for using terms that don't have a clear and agreed upon definition and yet you'll happily dismiss virtually all western comics by tossing them under this absurdly broad and undefinable term "superhero comics". I mean come on. You're writing off Hellboy as a superhero comic? That's like me writing off FMA as a "shounen comic". |
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