Forum - View topicNEWS: Manga Creator Ken Akamatsu Wins Seat in Japan's House of Councillors
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cchigu
Posts: 250 |
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As long as they keep my animu away from political propaganda and pushing some sort of narrative, I will be good.
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Alphonae
Posts: 100 |
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Madlad actually did it. Congratulations!
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Guile
Posts: 595 |
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It's nice to hear some good news for a change. I'm glad he was able to achieve his dreams.
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MarshalBanana
Posts: 5525 |
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GasterTheGreat
Posts: 41 |
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Akamatsu's main platform has always been fighting back against the regulation of Japanese media from foreign groups like the UN even before he got into politics. He's criticized things like feminism, affirmative action, and other concepts that have threatened creative freedom in anime and manga I'm not sure how much power he'll actually have in the end but even if it's just a seat at the table during discussions of the topic it's still a huge step forward to protecting mangaka and the medium as a whole. |
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Wyvern
Posts: 1606 |
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Every work of fiction ever written has a political viewpoint because that's how human beings work. If you haven't noticed that before then that means you only consider a story to be "pushing a narrative" when it says something you disagree with.
Yeah, nothing threatens creative freedom more than (checks notes) women getting equal pay and minorities getting jobs. Anyway, Akamatsu's most recent manga just ended a couple of months ago, and with this new position we're quite possibly looking at the end of his career as a mangaka. Feels like the end of an era, as he's been consistently producing popular work since Love Hina hit it big all those years ago. |
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Gamen
Posts: 256 |
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Yeah, it's a little more nuanced than that; it's not feminism he's criticized, but attacks on arguably sexualizing/objectifying depictions of women. And I assume the reference to affirmative action is a likewise oversimplified reference to his comments from two years ago detailed in Ken Akamatsu Comments on Casting POC Voice Actors in American Cartoons, Japanese Anime |
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Alphonae
Posts: 100 |
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You know equal wages wasn't what he meant when he said "feminism" and you know affirmative action is more than just "minorities getting jobs". As someone who's from a country that has implimented this policy since it's formation, trust me when I say it does these groups more harm than good. |
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AksaraKishou
Posts: 1414 Location: End of the World |
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There's several types of Feminism, in case you were not aware. |
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Electric Wooloo
Posts: 315 |
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I've always been a fan of Akamatsu and his work, including his positions against limiting artist freedoms. But the recent "criticism" of a UN group asking for an explanation from a JP newspaper that had signed on to conform to certain standards with them and Akamatsu treating it as a "Foreign Influence unjustly pushing it's agenda on a Japanese company" (Which I'll again state, had agreed to conform to certain standards AND was not being forced to do change anything only being asked about it) has raised some doubts in me.
I'm no expert on Japanese politics, but I know that the LDP has MANY wings and groups so I'll wait and see where on the spectrum Akamatsu falls. I sincerely hope it's not "Freedom of expression above everything else" in the libertarian sense that has led to some truly horrible cesspools of hate in English to come about online in the past decade. |
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Alphonae
Posts: 100 |
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I think it has to do with the fact that the incident has given a lot of negative rep to Tawawa and this sort of stuff discourages artists, even though there's no legal implications. Just look at the reviews of vol 1 on Amazon Japan, you'd see what I'm talking about. With that being said though, in this case it is the newspapers fault for signing up for something and going against it. But even then, stuff like this acts like a slippery slope and that's probably what Akamatsu is concerned about. Ofcourse, bad rep is still free attention, and while the number of haters has gone up, that doesn't change a damn thing, because the fans are still gonna buy it and naturally, there's gotta be new fans too, so in a way this was beneficial to the series. |
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KitKat1721
Posts: 976 |
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Oh fun, this guy. Most recent thing I remember was that awful propaganda comic centering himself and Taro Yamada as LDP RPG-style heroes who's enemies shout attack names like "affirmative action" or "supererogation."
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Ishida_Akira(fake)
Posts: 113 |
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That's not what he's fighting against though. He's fighting against foreigners demanding that manga be written in a certain way as to not offend others... usually other foreigner. |
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Casval Rem Deikun
Posts: 270 |
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Yeah, what a *whoosh* comment*. This is about the protection of artists and writers in manga/anime. What some of the other comments mean about feminists is that: artists should not be stopped or told to change their work because people feel offended by it. Which is a great thing! Artists should be able to tell and do whatever they want without worry. It's freedom of expression. I wish Akamatsu all the best in supporting the creators. They're in good hands. |
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IchiroFox
Posts: 34 |
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I'm really happy for him. I hope he can lead efforts to introduce protections for freedom of expression, safeguards for authors, publishers and advertisers against radical feminist censorship, and legislation that is good for the manga and anime industry. Good luck Akamatsu-san!
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