- Uchida, Shungiku
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▪ 1995In Japan, as elsewhere, success was part luck, part talent, and part hard work. For singer, dancer, author, and cartoonist Shungiku Uchida, it also included a calculated flouting of social proprieties to shock her devotees. In 1994 she won Japan's version of the French literary prize Deux Magots for two best-sellers. The first, a titillating yet disturbing autobiographical novel, sold 300,000 copies after its appearance in late 1993. By July 1994 it had gone into 18 printings. The other, We Are Reproducing, consisted of a series of manga (comics) on pregnancy, birth, and bringing up an illegitimate baby. Noted religious anthropologist Shinichi Nakagawa, a one-man jury, selected Uchida for "openly and frankly portraying life and sex, . . . at times even making men fear the reality so tenderly described."Uchida reinforced her individuality and defied convention by insisting on spelling her name "Shungicu." A vivacious entertainer noted for her colourful costumes and rhythmic dances, she frequently appeared in funky concerts and was a featured vocalist with Avecs, her own Latin band.Uchida was born in Nagasaki on Aug. 7, 1959. Her father deserted the family when she and a younger sister were in primary school. Sometime later, her mother, a dance teacher and bar hostess, began living with a fellow dance instructor. When Shungicu was forced to sleep with her stepfather, her mother did not interfere. One of Shungicu's happiest memories from those unhappy days was receiving a ream of rough paper from her fourth grade teacher for saying, in response to a question, that her dream was to become a manga-ka (cartoonist).Shungicu dropped out of high school in her second year and worked in a restaurant, in a bar, in a printshop, and as a domestic. At times she slept under a bridge. Five years later she left Nagasaki for Tokyo with her beloved manga and $7,000 in savings.Shungicu's first collection of manga, entitled Shungicu, was an instant hit when it appeared in 1984. Blending sex with what she described as "gag nonsense" that did not offend readers, she won a huge following matched by few others in the crowded field of Japanese manga-ka. One of Shungicu's best works was Minami-kun's Sweetheart, a manga portraying an amiable girl, Chiyomi, who suddenly shrinks to the size of a doll but continues to develop normally. From her place inside Minami-kun's pocket, she accompanies him everywhere he goes. She talks to him from the palm of his hand and sleeps on his pillow beside his head. They fall in love, but she is fatally injured when he is struck by a car and she is thrown to the ground. The romantic fantasy was made into a popular television drama in 1994.In less than 10 years Shungicu produced more than 60 books, including three collections of essays. Her manga books include A Working Girl's Thoughts, You Gotta Shungicu, The Living Dress, Strange Fruit, Unobserved Foot Beat, Fantasy of an Ordinary Young Girl, and Coelacanth Romance. (KAY K. TATEISHI)
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Universalium. 2010.