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  2. History of manga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_manga

    [27] 1900 saw the debut of Rakuten's Jiji Manga in the Jiji Shinpō newspaper—the first use of the word manga in its modern sense, [28] and where, in 1902, he began the first modern Japanese comic strip. [29] By the 1930s, comic strips were serialized in large-circulation monthly girls' and boys' magazine and collected into hardback volumes. [30]

  3. Kazuhiko Torishima - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazuhiko_Torishima

    [1] [4] He would read a manga 50 times, researching and analyzing where each and every panel should go, so that he could then explain this to the artists. [4] Torishima explained, "The speech balloons in manga can fit about three, seven- character -long lines of colloquial Japanese, and these are exchanged back and forth via dialogue between ...

  4. List of best-selling manga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_manga

    The following is a list of the best-selling Japanese manga series to date in terms of the number of collected tankōbon volumes sold. All series in this list have at least 20 million copies in circulation. This list is limited to Japanese manga and does not include manhwa, manhua or original English-language manga.

  5. History of comics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_comics

    In Japan, a country with a long tradition of illustration, comics were hugely popular. Referred to as manga, the Japanese form was established after World War II by Osamu Tezuka, who expanded the page count of work to number in the hundreds, and who developed a filmic style, heavily influenced by the Disney cartoons of the time.

  6. Lists of manga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_manga

    Manga (漫画, IPA: ⓘ) are comics created in Japan, or by Japanese creators in the Japanese language, conforming to a style developed in Japan in the late 19th century. [1] The term is also now used for a variety of other works in the style of or influenced by the Japanese comics.

  7. Shotaro Ishinomori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shotaro_Ishinomori

    At the end of 1997, Kazuhiko Shimamoto, a young and up-and-coming manga artist was contacted by an increasingly ill Ishinomori and asked if he would do a continuation, though more along the lines of a remake, of his 100-page, one-shot manga from 1970, Skull Man, the manga that became the basis for Kamen Rider. Ishinomori, who had been one of ...

  8. Eiichiro Oda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eiichiro_Oda

    Eiichiro Oda (Japanese: 尾田 栄一郎, Hepburn: Oda Eiichirō, born January 1, 1975) is a Japanese manga artist and the creator of the series One Piece.With more than 520 million tankōbon copies in circulation worldwide, One Piece is both the best-selling manga in history and the best-selling comic series printed in volume, in turn making Oda one of the best-selling fiction authors.

  9. History of webcomics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_webcomics

    A History of Webcomics. Antarctic Press. ISBN 0976804395. Atchison, Lee (2008-01-07). "A Brief History of Webcomics — The Third Age of Webcomics". Sequential Tart. Maragos, Nick (2005-11-07). "Will Strip for Games". 1UP. Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Various (2005). "The Artistic History of Webcomics – A Webcomics Examiner ...