Memory Politics and Popular Culture – The Example of the United Red Army in the Manga Red (2006–2018)

Serialized in a period of booming popular interest for the United Red Army (URA), Red (2006–2018) by manga artist Yamamoto Naoki (1960–) is to this day the most thoroughly detailed and researched work of fiction drawing on the famous Japanese terrorist group. In the present article, we would like to...

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Main Author: Fabien Carpentras
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The International Academic Forum 2019-08-01
Series:IAFOR Journal of Media, Communication & Film
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-media-communication-and-film/volume-6-issue-1/article-5/
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spelling doaj-dc5f4a35913241b096d93f1c08fd48d62020-11-25T01:52:34ZengThe International Academic ForumIAFOR Journal of Media, Communication & Film2187-06672187-06672019-08-01618510410.22492/ijmcf.6.1.05Memory Politics and Popular Culture – The Example of the United Red Army in the Manga Red (2006–2018)Fabien Carpentras0Yokohama National University, JapanSerialized in a period of booming popular interest for the United Red Army (URA), Red (2006–2018) by manga artist Yamamoto Naoki (1960–) is to this day the most thoroughly detailed and researched work of fiction drawing on the famous Japanese terrorist group. In the present article, we would like to address how Yamamoto is fully engaged in a memory struggle regarding the “truth” of the historical event – he has been active in the “Association to transmit the overall picture of the United Red Army incident,” a group involved in the gathering and publishing of testimonies surrounding the incident, bringing to the fore until then unknown and neglected details of the URA. And yet, serialized in the seinen manga magazine Evening, Red constitutes at the same time a genuine piece of popular culture, fostering narrative and visual devices aimed at a large audience (for instance, all the characters appear with false and dramatized names – Nagata Hiroko becoming Akagi or “Red Castle” Hiroko – and the ideological motivations are all downplayed in favor of more sanitized and universal ones). By so doing, Yamamoto succeeds in reshaping the popular memory of the URA, but we argue that this reworking is made at the expense of the political and social background of the organization, with the result of hindering our social and historical understanding of this foundational event of contemporary Japan politics.https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-media-communication-and-film/volume-6-issue-1/article-5/memorypoliticsmangaUnited Red Army1968
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fabien Carpentras
spellingShingle Fabien Carpentras
Memory Politics and Popular Culture – The Example of the United Red Army in the Manga Red (2006–2018)
IAFOR Journal of Media, Communication & Film
memory
politics
manga
United Red Army
1968
author_facet Fabien Carpentras
author_sort Fabien Carpentras
title Memory Politics and Popular Culture – The Example of the United Red Army in the Manga Red (2006–2018)
title_short Memory Politics and Popular Culture – The Example of the United Red Army in the Manga Red (2006–2018)
title_full Memory Politics and Popular Culture – The Example of the United Red Army in the Manga Red (2006–2018)
title_fullStr Memory Politics and Popular Culture – The Example of the United Red Army in the Manga Red (2006–2018)
title_full_unstemmed Memory Politics and Popular Culture – The Example of the United Red Army in the Manga Red (2006–2018)
title_sort memory politics and popular culture – the example of the united red army in the manga red (2006–2018)
publisher The International Academic Forum
series IAFOR Journal of Media, Communication & Film
issn 2187-0667
2187-0667
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Serialized in a period of booming popular interest for the United Red Army (URA), Red (2006–2018) by manga artist Yamamoto Naoki (1960–) is to this day the most thoroughly detailed and researched work of fiction drawing on the famous Japanese terrorist group. In the present article, we would like to address how Yamamoto is fully engaged in a memory struggle regarding the “truth” of the historical event – he has been active in the “Association to transmit the overall picture of the United Red Army incident,” a group involved in the gathering and publishing of testimonies surrounding the incident, bringing to the fore until then unknown and neglected details of the URA. And yet, serialized in the seinen manga magazine Evening, Red constitutes at the same time a genuine piece of popular culture, fostering narrative and visual devices aimed at a large audience (for instance, all the characters appear with false and dramatized names – Nagata Hiroko becoming Akagi or “Red Castle” Hiroko – and the ideological motivations are all downplayed in favor of more sanitized and universal ones). By so doing, Yamamoto succeeds in reshaping the popular memory of the URA, but we argue that this reworking is made at the expense of the political and social background of the organization, with the result of hindering our social and historical understanding of this foundational event of contemporary Japan politics.
topic memory
politics
manga
United Red Army
1968
url https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-media-communication-and-film/volume-6-issue-1/article-5/
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