Shigeru Mizuki's Hitler

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Shigeru Mizuki's Hitler, originally titled

Weekly Manga Sunday. In November 2015, it was published in English by Drawn & Quarterly,[1] translated by Zack Davisson.[2] The English version was a translation of a version in French rather than a direct translation from Japanese.[3]

Contents

Olivier Sava of The A.V. Club, wrote that Hitler is portrayed as he actually was, and as he deludely saw himself; in regards to the former, Sava characterizes that version of Hitler as "dopey, sad, and often pathetic" and that he "looks distraught even when he’s whistling with pleasure, suggesting that its impossible for the man to be truly happy when so much of his life is fueled by hate."[4] Davin Arul of The Star, a Malaysian publication, stated that it uses Mizuki's "trademark style of putting almost sketchily-drawn cartoon characters in realistic, highly-detailed settings".[1]

The beginning and the end of the book refer to the

Holocaust.[5] Arul wrote that the Holocaust in this graphic novel is "used as a bookend and does not figure too much in between – possibly because Mizuki did not want the magnitude of it to eclipse the rest of his story."[1] Jan-Paul Koopman of Der Spiegel also argued that the Holocaust is not given much attention in the book.[5]

The book has a two-page list of dramatis personae at the front of the book and, in the English version, a footnote index in the back that has fifteen pages.[1]

Release

The serialization in Weekly Manga Saturday began on May 8 and ended on August 28. On March 1, 1972, it was released as a single volume.[6]

In 2014 Drawn & Quarterly announced it was going to release an English translation.[7]

The book was published in Germany in 2019, with Reprodukt as the publisher. Jens Balzer wrote a foreword for the German version.[5]

Reception

Publishers Weekly described it as a "fresh take". It was ranked as a "Publishers Weekly Pick", and the work stated that it is "a candidate for the year’s best graphic novel."[8]

Davin Arul wrote that a reader gets accustomed to the cartoonish art style despite it being initially "really jarring".[1] Arul stated that the work is highly complex due to the amount of detail and that can "lose the reader".[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Arul, Davin (2016-03-22). "Review: Shigeru Mizuki's Hitler". The Star. Retrieved 2020-03-19.
  2. ^ "Shigeru Mizuki's Hitler". Drawn & Quarterly. Retrieved 2020-03-20.
  3. .
  4. ^ Sava, Olivier (2015-11-17). "Exclusive D&Q preview: A dictator rises in Shigeru Mizuki's Hitler". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 2023-03-06.
  5. ^ a b c Koopmann, Jan-Paul (2019-04-13). "Der Führer aus der Ferne gesehen". Der Spiegel (in German). Retrieved 2023-03-06. Tatsächlich bleibt die Shoah[...]
  6. .
  7. ^ Loveridge, Lynzee (2014-07-27). "Drawn & Quarterly Adds Shigeru Mizuki's Hitler, Tadao Tsuge's Trash Market Manga". Anime News Network.
  8. ^ "Shigeru Mizuki's Hitler". Publishers Weekly. 2015-11-09. Retrieved 2020-03-19.

External links