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The Big Two are cognizant of this fact, and DC Comics head honcho Jim Lee talked about it in an interview about his career and success with NikkeiXTrend, a Japanese publication. Lee has presided over the current successes DC is having, and spoke to the publication about the impact that manga has had on culture and what DC can learn from the example of the Japanese comic industry.
Lee Admits That American Comics Can Learn from Manga’s Example

Lee talked about the success of manga ( and Asian culture in general) in the West, and had a very interesting perceptive on the whole thing. In the interview, he said, โThe stories told in Japanese manga and anime are incredibly powerful. I often find myself wondering, โWhat is missing in Western comics, and why arenโt they able to achieve the same flavor?โ Also, I think manga has an โadvantageโ over American comics, which are mostly about superheroes, and thatโs where the majority of sales and readers are concentrated. In Japan, itโs closer to โliterature,โ and anyone can read it, and itโs not just hero stories. Thereโs a much wider range of genres, like stories about cooking and soccer. You can draw stories from that. So Iโm very happy that the manga has been so successful, because it gives me a โgoalโ to aim for. The manga market is bigger than our industry, so the question becomes, โWhat can we learn from this?โโ
Lee gets to the root of the problem immediately and that’s the sheer variety of manga, combined with the way that the Japanese look at comics. There’s a manga for everything, from the well known shonen manga to sports, cooking, romance, and so many more, while American comics are some iteration of the superhero concept, limiting the market. Meanwhile, the fact that comics and an animation are looked down as children’s media in the West adds to this. Adults in Japan respect manga and anime as art forms and still consume them into adulthood. Lee also brought up the fact that youth trends often revolve around the young wanting something new that’s “uniquely their own”, and in the West, that’s manga. Superhero comics revolve around the same characters that generations have read; they can feel old fashioned to younger readers, while manga takes them to new places.








