A Drifting Life. Jump to navigation Jump to search. A Drifting Life (劇画漂流, Gekiga Hyōryū) is an autobiographical Japanese manga written and illustrated by Yoshihiro Tatsumi and chronicles his life from 1945 to 1960 when he began submitting and publishing manga.
A Drifting Life. A Drifting Life (劇画漂流, Gekiga Hyōryū) is an autobiographical Japanese manga written and illustrated by Yoshihiro Tatsumi and chronicles his life from 1945 to 1960 when he began submitting and publishing manga. It was released in Japan as two bound volumes on November 20, 2008.
The work has been adapted into an animated feature film, Tatsumi, directed by Eric Khoo and released in 2011. Tatsumi spent 11 years working on A Drifting Life. It was released in Japan as two bound volumes on November 20, 2008. It is licensed in North America by Drawn & Quarterly and was released as an 840-page wide-ban volume in April 2009.
In the mid 20th century, young Hiroshi found himself enamored with manga – especially works created by Osamu Tezuka. With a strong desire to publish his own works, Hiroshi picked up a pen and began a lifelong journey to live up to his role model.
A Drifting Life is a specialty manga for fans familiar with Yoshihiro Tatsumi's work. This is not a history of Gekiga, but an autobiography of Tatsumi from childhood to his later twenties.
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A Drifting Life follows the artist through all the different phases of his work as mangaka, as he tri es to refine his art and create a 'manga that isn't manga.'. At the same time, though, the book gives a vivid and animated depiction of Japan's social, political and cultural changes from 1945 until 1960 . We see the.
Spanning fifteen years from August 1945 to June 1960, Tatsumi’s stand-in protagonist, Hiroshi, faces his father’s financial burdens ...
At over 850 pages, it's also Tatsumi's most ambitious work. Despite the usual scope of Tatsumi's material, it's also in many. Yoshihiro Tatsumi, A Drifting Life (Drawn and Quarterly, 2009) Despite my loathing of memoirs, every once in a while one comes along I can't not read.
Hopefully between those editions and the publication of A Drifting Life, Yoshiro Tatsumi will be as well known in the west as Osamu Tezuka (Tatsumi's hero and literary forefather) or Takao Saito (his friend and literary contemporary). Even though the book is gargantuan it is a quick read.
This is an autobiography of the manga creator Yoshihiro Tatsumi, who was one of the fathers of 'gekiga' - a subset of manga that was created back in the '50s in order to differentiate manga written for adults from children's comics (as, at that time, almost all manga were still written for children).
This is definitely a long and encompassing story. It covers the early life of Tatsumi as he develops into a manga artist, and in this way, the book can be best read as a kunstlerroman.
The book is autobiographical, taking in details of Tatsumi's (renamed Katsumi HIroshi in the book) home life, his ill brother, his philandering father, his dedicated mother, and moving him through high school becoming progressively interested and committed to manga, until he becomes a full time manga artist and writer.