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Book Cover for: Oba Electroplating Factory, Yoshiharu Tsuge

Oba Electroplating Factory

Yoshiharu Tsuge

An alt-manga legend strikes out on his own, creating some of his most revealing and personal works

Oba Electroplating Factory
is a startlingly bleak but nonetheless captivating portrait of mid-century Japan in its most unglamorous iteration. Glimpses of the artist reflecting upon his life, his work, and his contemporaries pepper the narrative landscape: a wife teases her husband about a former fling on a trip to the hot springs, a young cartoonist is aghast at the cavalier conduct of his supposed betters, and imperfect men must grapple with the discomfort of their own honesty. Tsuge's stories are studies in staging nature, working to evoke stillness and movement in such a way that renders his chosen setting a character all on its own.

Following the breakthrough success of Nejishiki, Yoshiharu Tsuge forges a path for autofiction in manga and changes the cultural landscape of comics forever. Some of his most revealing and personal works were published between 1973 to 1974. As much as it is a testament to the author's predilection for addressing sensitive and mature themes in response to his culture, this volume also collects works from the only period in which Tsuge tries his hand at writing for a mainstream audience in earnest.

This fourth volume in the complete works of a legendary manga-ka is an indispensable addition to the literary comics canon and shining example of world literature at its most human.


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Book Details

  • Publisher: Drawn & Quarterly
  • Publish Date: Aug 13rd, 2024
  • Pages: 272
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.50in - 6.20in - 1.10in - 1.50lb
  • EAN: 9781770466791
  • Categories: LiteraryEast Asian Style - Manga - General

About the Author

Tsuge, Yoshiharu: - Yoshiharu Tsuge was born in Tokyo, Japan, in 1937. Influenced by the realistic and gritty manga of Yoshihiro Tatsumi, he began making his own comics and was briefly recruited to assist Shigeru Mizuki in the 1960s. In 1968, while working for Garo magazine, Tsuge published the groundbreaking story "Neji-shiki" (commonly called "Screw Style" by Western readers), which established him as an influential manga-ka and a cultural touchstone in the changing Japanese art world. He is considered the originator and greatest practitioner of the I-novel method of comics-making. In 2005, Tsuge was nominated for the Best Album Award at Angoulême International and in 2017 won the Japan Cartoonists Association Grand Award for Yume to tabi no sekai.

Praise for this book

"Essential... Tsuge is at the top of his game in this dazzling collection from the 1970s, which finds the underground manga legend moving from nightmare surrealism to semi-autobiographical pieces that draw horror from unflinching realism." --Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

"A revered creator of gekiga manga [who works] in a style both spare and lush." --New York Times Book Review

"Evidence that Tsuge remains one of the world's great cartoonists." --The Toronto Star

"Fascinating... one of Japan's most celebrated and reclusive artists." --The Guardian