Home | E-Submission | Sitemap | Contact Us |  
top_img
The Journal of Japanese Language Literature Studies > Volume 18(1); 2024 > Article
Border Crossings: The Journal of Japanese-Language Literature Studies 2024;18(1): 113-132.
doi: https://doi.org/10.22628/bcjjl.2024.18.1.113
“Paradise” Written by Mizuki Shigeru :His Friendship with the Tolai People Generated by The Asian-Pacific War
Akira KOJIMA
PhD Candidate, Nagoya University Graduate School of The Humanities
水木しげるの描いた「天国」 ―― 戦争が生んだトライ族との交流
小島秋良
名古屋大学大学院人文学研究科博士候補研究員
Correspondence  Akira KOJIMA ,Email: adcsnph27@gmail.com
Published online: 30 June 2024.
Copyright ©2024 The Global Institute for Japanese Studies, Korea University
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
ABSTRACT
This paper focuses on the representation of “Paradise” by Mizuki Shigeru, and analyzes his essays and manga which he wrote about his friendship with the Tolai people. In the Asian-Pacific War, Mizuki was dispatched as a soldier in Rabaul, Papua New Guinea. There, he struck up a friendship with Topetoro and his family who were island inhabitants called the Tolai people. After the war ended Mizuki returned to Japan then revisited Rabaul in 1971 where their friendship resumed. Mizuki wrote about the Tolai peoples’ life as a “Paradise” many times in his essays and manga after meeting them again. First, this paper examines Mizuki’s work where he wrote about Topetoro’s life as a “Paradise”, the primary target of which was readers who hadn’t experienced the Asian-pacific war. Next, this paper analyzes the changing narrative episodes about Topetoro in Mizuki’s essays, and argues that this change was affected by Topetoro’s death. Finally, this paper examines Mizuki’s fictional representation of “Paradise” in the Manga Yumesaki Annai Neko after Topetoro’s death. There were many Japanese people who revisited war zones after the 1970s, but Mizuki’s purpose of meeting local inhabitants again was not common. This paper argues that significance of Mizuki’s special experiences documented in his essays and Manga.
Keywords: Mizuki Shigeru, Revisit the War Zones after the War, The Tolai People, Essay, Manga

キ―ワ―ド: 水木しげる, 戦地再訪, トライ族, エッセイ, 漫画
TOOLS
PDF Links  PDF Links
Full text via DOI  Full text via DOI
Download Citation  Download Citation
  Print
Share:      
METRICS
0
Crossref
685
View
31
Download
Related article
The publisher and Editorial office
Global Institute for Japanese Studies, Korea University
Chungsan MK Culture Center, Inchon-ro 108, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul, 136-075, Korea
TEL: +82-2-3290-2592    FAX: +82-2-3290-2538   E-mail: bcrossing.edit@gmail.com
About |  Browse Articles |  Current Issue |  For Authors and Reviewers
Copyright © 2024 Global Institute for Japanese Studies, Korea University.                 Developed in M2PI
Close layer
prev next