... There is a very popular Japanese comic (manga) magazine, "Weekly Shonen (means boys) Jump", with a weekly a circulation of more than 2 million. In two issues in 2009, autophagy appeared in a story in which a hero fought against an enemy. The hero was starved, but was activated by inducing autophagy (unfortunately, the effect did not last long). This magazine told more than 2 million children (and some ...
Tópico(s): Soybean genetics and cultivation
2010 - Wiley | FEBS Letters
... popular periodical, the best-selling shônen (boys) manga magazine, Shûkan Shônen Jump ( Weekly Shônen Jump). Jump’s documentary-like portrayals of the manga production process have bled out from the magazine in “exclusive” footage that takes viewers on behind- ...
Tópico(s): Asian Culture and Media Studies
2019 - SAGE Publishing | Television & New Media
... variety of formats and genres. In 1959, two weekly shōnen (or boys) magazines dedicated to manga began publication, Shūkan Shōnen Magazine and Shūkan Shōnen Sunday, and Tezuka began to contribute to them. These weekly manga magazines addressed not only elementary school pupils but also ...
Tópico(s): Digital Games and Media
2013 - University of Minnesota Press | Mechademia Second Arc
... Obake no Q-tarō was serialized in manga magazines for boys published by Shogakkan, including Weekly Shōnen Sunday, from 1964 to 1966.4. In 2008, ...
Tópico(s): Japanese History and Culture
2014 - Routledge | Japan Forum
... the formation of a manga industry centered on weekly magazines differentiated into distinct readerships (children, boys, girls, youth, ... Ryan Holmberg resituates the impact of the manga magazine Manga Shōnen (inaugurated in 1948) in historical terms, showing its ...
2013 - University of Minnesota Press | Mechademia Second Arc
... haphazard fashion as part of a story in Shōnen in 1951, but he did not make Atom the star of his own series until 1952. Tezuka continued to draw the Mighty Atom series in the same monthly magazine until it went out of business in 1968, ...
Tópico(s): Art, Technology, and Culture
2013 - University of Minnesota Press | Mechademia Second Arc