Sakumi Yoshino
This article may require copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone, or spelling. (August 2023) |
Sakumi Yoshino | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | April 20, 2016 |
Nationality | Japanese |
Occupation | Manga artist |
Sakumi Yoshino (吉野朔実, Yoshino Sakumi, February 19, 1959 – April 20, 2016) was a Japanese manga artist and literature critic. She became known for her shōjo manga in Bouquet magazine in the 1980s and 1990s. In the late 1990s, she also started drawing seinen manga and publishing essays around film, manga and literature.
Life and career
Yoshino was born in 1959 in Osaka. She developed a passion for drawing while in elementary school and became an avid manga reader. She was especially fond of shōjo manga and read manga by artists from the Year 24 Group such as Moto Hagio, Ryoko Yamagishi and Yumiko Oshima.[1] While she didn't necessarily want to become a manga artist after high school, she didn't want to work for a company either. When a classmate of hers became a professional manga artist, she decided to give it a try as well.[2] She had quite an independent start into the industry; she didn't regularly work as an assistant for other manga artists, although she helped out temporarily a few times at different places, nor did she attend arts school.[3]
Her first work as a professional manga artist was the short story "Utsu Yori Sō ga Yoroshii no!", which appeared in the January 1980 issue of Bouquet.[4][5] A few years into her career, she developed a passion for drawing rather than just seeing it as a way to make ends meet.[3] In 1985, she moved to Tokyo to fully focus on her career.[6] She was one of the most prominent artists working for Bouquet in the 1980s and 1990s, creating series such as Shōnen wa Kōya o Mezasu and Juliet no Tamago for the magazine.
When the editorial team of Bouquet changed and the magazine was eventually shut down at the end of the 1990s, she switched from Shueisha to publishing with Shogakukan. With Shogakukan, she drew short stories and series both for the magazine Petit Flower and its successor Flowers, both of which had a similar target group of young women as the magazine she previously worked with, but also the seinen manga magazine Big Comic Spirits, which had adult men as its main target group. In 2002, she created the cover illustration for the first issue of Flowers.[7]
She also became active as a film and literature critic, published essays and predictions of horse racing.[7] Her book-related essay manga Yoshino Sakumi Gekijō ran for 20 years in a literary magazine.
In 2003, she approached the seinen magazine Monthly Ikki, which then had recently become a standalone monthly magazine, to draw the series Period. She felt that Monthly Ikki would allow her to write what she wanted, as the manga revolved around the theme of violence in different forms.[8]
In 2016, she passed away at 57 due to illness. A few days after her death, the June issue of Flowers published her short story "Itsuka Midori no Hanataba ni" posthumously and an interview with her as part of the magazine's 15th anniversary.[9]
Style
Yoshino considers manga artists Yumiko Oshima and Moto Hagio as her greatest influences.[7] Like for these two artists, mother-daughter relationships are a recurring theme for Yoshino.[10]: 246
Yoshino preferred drawing short stories and episodic series such as Itaike na Hitomi over continuous series, as she was fatigued by committing to character development and solving issues coming up in the story line. She stated that short stories also allowed her to introduce sudden and violent breaks in storytelling, ending a manga quite abruptly without needing to justify it.[3]
While her work for female readers has irregular panel layout, she placed panels in separate squares in her work for seinen magazines.[11]
Legacy
Yoshino's work has been translated into Chinese and Korean[12] and will be translated into French in 2024.[13] Her short story Kioku no Gihō was adapted into a live-action film in 2020.[6]
Works
Series
Title | Year | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|
Groovy Night (グルービーナイト) | 1981 | Serialized in Bouquet Published by Shueisha in 1 vol. |
[14] |
Gekka no Ichigun (月下の一群) | 1982–1983 | Serialized in Bouquet Published by Shueisha in 3 vol. |
[15] |
Happy Age | 1984–1985 | Published by Shueisha in 2 vol. | [16] |
Shōnen wa Kōya o Mezasu (少年は荒野をめざす) | 1985–1987 | Serialized in Bouquet Published by Shueisha in 6 vol. |
[17] |
Juliet no Tamago (ジュリエットの卵) | 1988–1989 | Serialized in Bouquet Published by Shueisha in 5 vol. |
[18] |
La Masquera | 1990 | Published by Shueisha in 1 vol. | [19] |
Itaike na Hitomi (いたいけな瞳) | 1990–1993 | Serialized in Bouquet Published by Shueisha in 8 vol. |
[20] |
Eccentrics | 1993–1994 | Published by Shueisha in 4 vol. | [21] |
Boku Dake ga Shitteiru (ぼくだけが知っている) | 1994–1998 | Serialized in Bouquet and Bouquet Deluxe Published by Shueisha in 5 vol. |
[22] |
Renaiteki Shunkan (恋愛的瞬間) | 1996 | Serialized in Bouquet Published by Shueisha in 5 vol. |
[23] |
Yoshino Sakumi Gekijō (吉野朔実劇場) | 1996–2016 | Essay manga Serialized in Hon no Zasshi Published by Hon no Zasshisha in 11 vol. |
[9] |
Tōko (瞳子) | 2001 | Serialized in Weekly Big Comic Spirits Published by Shogakukan in 1 vol. |
[24] |
Period | 2003–2014 | Serialized in Monthly Ikki Published by Shogakukan in 5 vol. |
[25] |
Tōmei Ningen no Shissō (透明人間の失踪) | 2003 | Serialized in Flowers Published by Shogakukan in 1 vol. |
[26] |
Short story collections
Title | Year | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|
Ōsama no Dinner (王様のDINNER) | 1985 | Short story collection published by Shueisha in 1 vol. | [27] |
Tenshi no Koe (天使の声) | 1988 | Short story collection published by Shueisha in 1 vol. | [28] |
Gūrudo wo Kiki Nagara (グールドを聴きながら) | 2000 | Short story collection published by Shogakukan in 1 vol. Includes "Gūrudo wo Kiki Nagara", "haRmony", "Kodomo wa Nakanai", "Shu" and "Dry Ice" |
[5] |
Kuribayashi Kanae no Hanzai (栗林かなえの犯罪) | 2001 | Short story collection published by Shogakukan in 1 vol. Includes "Kuribayashi Kanae no Hanzai", "Daremoinai Nohara de", " Pinhōru Keibu - Tennen no Tenmado", "Private Virus" |
[29] |
Kioku no Gihō (記憶の技法) | 2002 | Short story collection published by Shogakukan in 1 vol. | [30] |
Itsuka Midori no Hanataba ni (いつか緑の花束に) | 2016 | Short story collection published by Shogakukan in 1 vol. Includes "Mother", "Itsuka Midori no Hanataba ni", "Ryū no Otsukai", "Unmei no Hito", "Hana no Yōdatta" |
[31] |
Short stories
Title | Year | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|
"Utsu Yori Sō ga Yoroshii no!" (ウツよりソウがよろしいの!) | 1980 | Short story published in Bouquet | [4] |
"Tasogare Complex" (たそがれコンプレックス) | 1980 | Short story published in Bouquet | [4] |
"Henjin in the Onshitsu" (変人 in the 温室) | 1980 | Short story published in Bouquet | [4] |
"Kin'iro no Rakuyō no Furishikiru…" (金色の落葉のふりしきる…) | 1980 | Short story published in Bouquet | [4] |
"Yuki no Niwa yori Mezameyo" (雪の庭よりめざめよ) | 1981 | Short story published in Bouquet Deluxe | |
"Papillon Road" (パピヨン・ロード) | 1981 | Short story published in Bouquet | |
"Tristan" | 1983 | Short story published in Bouquet Deluxe | |
"Ōsama no Dinner" (王様のDINNER) | 1984 | Short story published in Bouquet Deluxe | |
"Zanmu" (残夢) | 1985 | Short story published in Bouquet Selection | |
"Tenshi no Koe" (天使の声) | 1988 | Short story published in Bouquet | |
"Suika" (水瓜) | 2007 | Short story published in Flowers | |
"Itsuka Midori no Hanataba ni" (いつか緑の花束に) | 2016 | Short story published in Flowers | [9] |
References
- ^ King, Fraser & Yoshino 2010, p. 114, 116.
- ^ King, Fraser & Yoshino 2010, p. 122.
- ^ a b c King, Fraser & Yoshino 2010, p. 123.
- ^ a b c d e "ぶ~け、ぶ~けせれくしょん、ぶ~けデラックス、目次 -1980-". We Love BOUQUET!. Archived from the original on February 15, 2003. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
- ^ a b "グールドを聴きながら 吉野朔実 - 小学館eコミックストア 公式配信". 小学館eコミックストア (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ a b "吉野 朔実(漫画家)". Mangapedia (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-03-18.
- ^ a b c "吉野朔実". Flowers. January 2003. Retrieved March 9, 2023.
- ^ King, Fraser & Yoshino 2010, p. 121.
- ^ a b c "Period Manga Creator Sakumi Yoshino Passes Away at 57". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2023-02-28.
- ^ Aoyama, Tomoko (2015). "Narratives of Mother-Daughter Reconciliation: New Possibilities in Ageing Japan". In Lisa Raith; Jenny Jones; Marie Porter (eds.). Mothers at the Margins: Stories of Challenge, Resistance and Love. Cambridge Scholars. pp. 245–260. ISBN 9781443879163.
- ^ King, Fraser & Yoshino 2010, p. 126.
- ^ King, Fraser & Yoshino 2010, p. 129.
- ^ "Akata annonce trois nouveaux titres pour la collection Héritages, 15 Juillet 2023". manga-news.com (in French). Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "グルービィナイト". Media Arts Database. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
- ^ "月下の一群 1/吉野朔実". 集英社コミック公式 S-MANGA. Retrieved 2023-02-28.
- ^ "HAPPY AGE前編 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "少年は荒野をめざす1 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "ジュリエットの卵1 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "LA MASCHERA1 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "いたいけな瞳1 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "ECCENTRICS1 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "ぼくだけが知っている1 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "恋愛的瞬間1 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "瞳子(とうこ) 吉野朔実 - 小学館eコミックストア 公式配信". 小学館eコミックストア (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "Period1集 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "透明人間の失踪 吉野朔実 - 小学館eコミックストア 公式配信". 小学館eコミックストア (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "王様のDINNER1 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "天使の声 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "栗林かなえの犯罪 吉野朔実 - 小学館eコミックストア 公式配信". 小学館eコミックストア (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "記憶の技法 - メディア芸術データベース". mediaarts-db.bunka.go.jp. Retrieved 2023-07-27.
- ^ "吉野朔実作品集 いつか緑の花束に | 吉野朔実 – 小学館コミック". shogakukan-comic.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-07-27.
Bibliography
- King, Emerald; Fraser, Lucy; Yoshino, Sakumi (2010). "An Interview with Sakumi Yoshino". U.S.-Japan Women's Journal (38): 113–132. ISSN 2330-5037. JSTOR 42772012.