Manga publications are capitalising on Japan's insecurities, writes David 
McNeill in Tokyo

KARL MARX, who predicted that capitalism would crumble under the weight of its 
own contradictions, is making a comeback - in the form of a comic.

More than 140 years after Marx's Das Kapital (Capital) was released on an 
unsuspecting and initially baffled world, its dense meditation on political 
economy and alienation is to be splashed across speech bubbles on the pages of 
a Japanese manga.

Set for release at the start of next month, Reading Das Kapital through Manga 
is expected to top the comic bestseller lists, following the success of a 
string of popular publications capitalising on Japan's growing inequalities and 
economic insecurity.

The world's second-largest economy has slipped into recession for the first 
time since 2001, despite a $275 billion government stimulus package designed to 
insulate it from the impact of the global financial tsunami.

More than one-third of the workforce is already part-time and with profits 
diving even at manufacturing powerhouses like Sony and Toyota, millions of 
young people express deep pessimism about the future.

The economic turmoil has provided fertile ground for critics of free-market 
capitalism, new and old. A manga rendering of The Crab Ship (Kanikosen), a 
grimy 1930s proletarian classic about the exploitation of workers aboard a 
fishing boat, stunned Tokyo-based publisher East Press this year by shifting 
more than half a million copies.

Several introductions to Capital and other Marxist tomes have been rushed out 
since and a book by a former broker berating the sticky-fingered bankers of 
Wall Street has become one of the year's fastest non-fiction sellers.

"Poverty has been a growing and visible problem for some time, but now people 
are looking for answers about why it is returning," said Kaori Katada, a 
lecturer in social welfare. "That's why they're turning to these books."

Japan's prolific comic culture has for years distilled complex issues into 
pocket-sized, graphic books that can be read in the office or during long 
commutes. History, war and the country's tortured relationship with China have 
all been grist to manga artists; East Press, publisher of the comic Das 
Kapital, has a catalogue of unusual titles including Leo Tolstoy's War and 
Peace , Dante's Divine Comedy, Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf and Shakespeare's King 
Lear .

Sneak previews suggest that the comic Das Kapital has not shirked on the key 
details of Marx's forbidding original. Exploited salary-men are seen slowly 
coming to terms with the bearded philosopher's central analysis: that they are 
the sole source of capitalism's wealth.

Along the way, they are treated to a tour of commodity fetishism, the labour 
theory of value and the law of declining profits. Ultimately, explain the 
speech bubbles, capitalism creates its own gravediggers - the workers who 
create its wealth - although it's doubtful that Marx ever envisioned them armed 
with graphic novels.

While there are few signs that the novel's ideas have translated to major 
political activity, there have been recent signs of life on the once-moribund 
left.

A march last month by anti- poverty campaigners on the Tokyo house of prime 
minister Taro Aso, aimed at calling attention to his considerable wealth, made 
headlines after the police shut it down and arrested several activists.

A video of the arrests has since become an underground phenomenon, earning tens 
of thousands of views on YouTube.

"I think many young people in Japan are afraid of the future and that fear is 
sometimes turning to anger," said Kosuke Hashimoto, one of the activists who 
took part in that march. "Reading comics might only be the start."

This article appears in the print edition of the Irish Times
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to