As with all editions of the Annual Bibliography of Anime and Manga Studies, it is likely that this list is not complete. Recommendations or suggestions for additional entries to add are always welcome!
Book Chapters
Total Published: 7
Gill, Tom. Transformational magic: Some Japanese super-heroes and monsters. In Dolores P. Martinez (Ed.), The worlds of Japanese popular culture: Gender, shifting boundaries and global cultures (pp. 33-55). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Levi, Antonia. The new American hero: Made in Japan. In Mary Lynn Kittelson (Ed.), The soul of popular culture: Looking at contemporary heroes, myths and monsters (pp. 68-83). Peru, IL: Open Court.
*** OPEN ACCESS *** Morioka, Masahiro. The structure of the inner life of a philospher: The multi-layered aspects of speech.
Translated by Ethan Schwalbe. Originally published as Aru tetsugakusha no naimen kozo: Katari no nakano jusoseiin. In Tetsuo Yamaori (Ed.), Nihonjin no shiso no Jusosei: Watashi no shiza kara kangaeru (pp. 77-100). Tokyo: Chikuma Shobo.
Napier, Susan. Vampires, psychic girls, flying women and Sailor Scouts: Four faces of the young female in Japanese popular culture. In Dolores P. Martinez (Ed.), The worlds of Japanese popular culture: Gender, shifting boundaries and global cultures (pp. 91-109). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Standish, Isolde. Akira, postmodernism, and resistance. In Dolores P. Martinez (Ed.), The worlds of Japanese popular culture: Gender, shifting boundaries and global cultures (pp. 56-74). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Suzuki, Kazuko. Pornography or therapy? Japanese girls creating the yaoi phenomenon. In Sherrie A. Inness (Ed.), Millennium girls: Today’s girls around the world (pp. 243-268). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
Tobin, Joseph. An American otaku (or, a boy’s virtual life on the Net). In Julian Sefton-Green (Ed.), Digital diversions: Youth culture in the age of multimedia (pp. 99-118). London: UCL Press.
Articles
Total Published: 11
*** OPEN ACCESS *** Chute, David. Organic machine: The world of Hayao Miyazaki. Film Comment, 34(6), 62-65.
Furusho, Junichi, et al., Patient background of the Pokemon phenomenon: Questionnaire studies in multiple pediatric clinics. Acta Paediatrica Japonica, 40(6), 550-554.
Gilson, Mark. A brief history of Japanese robophilia. Leonardo, 31(5), 367-369.
Grigsby, Mary. Sailormoon: Manga (comics) and anime (cartoon) superheroine meets Barbie: Global entertainment commodity comes to the United States. The Journal of Popular Culture, 32(1), 59-80.
*** OPEN ACCESS *** Ishida, Shigenobu, et al. (1998). Photosensitive seizures provoked while viewing “Pocket Monsters,” a made-for-television animated program in Japan. Epilepsia, 39(12), 1340-1344.
Kinsella, Sharon. Japanese subculture in the 1990s: Otaku and the amateur manga movement. The Journal of Japanese Studies, 24(2), 289-316.
Lee, Gregory, B., & Lam, Sunny S.K. Wicked cities: Cyberculture and the reimagining of identity in the ‘non-Western’ metropolis. Futures, 30(10), 967-979.
Niijima, Shin-ichi, et al. Clinical electroencephalographic study of nine pediatric patients with convulsion induced by the TV animation, Pocket Monster. Acta Paediatrica Japonica, 40(6), 544-549.
[also published in Pediatrics International, 40(6), 554-549]
Osmond, Andrew. Nausicaa and the fantasy of Hayao Miyazaki. Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction, 72, 57-80.
Stanley, Jesse. Anime 101 and more. Japan Ink: An Online Journal of Japanese Studies.
*** ARCHIVED VERSION ***
Yamamoto, Fumiko. Heisei Tanuki-gassen: Pon Poko. Post Script, 18(1), 59-67.