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Eagle: The Making of an Asian-American President

From CartoonWiki

Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox animanga/Header Template:Infobox animanga/Print Template:Infobox animanga/Other Template:Infobox animanga/Footer Template:Nihongo is a Japanese political manga series by Kaiji Kawaguchi serialized in Big Comic, a seinen manga magazine published by Shogakukan. Its plot, following a Japanese American senator as he runs for president of the United States, was thoroughly researched by Kawaguchi, including during several weeks of travel in the U.S. during the campaigns for the 2000 election.[1]

Plot

Eagle takes place during the 2000 presidential election. Some of the characters are entirely original, such as Senator Template:Nihongo and the series protagonist, Japanese journalist Template:Nihongo. Others are fictionalized depictions of real people, such as campaign advisor George Tuck (based on Dick Tuck), Democratic Vice-President Al Noah (based on Al Gore), and the current president Template:Nihongo, who hails from Arkansas, has faced multiple scandals, and has a politically ambitious wife named Template:Nihongo.

Characters

Main cast

Takashi Jo

A reporter for the Maicho Shimbun, Jo is invited out-of-the-blue to cover Senator Yamaoka on the campaign trail, just days after losing his mother Tomiko to an apparent gas leak. Despite having little to no experience covering political stories, Jo embarks for the United States, where he soon finds out that Yamaoka is actually his father.

Kenneth Jukichi Yamaoka

A junior Democratic senator from New York, Yamaoka is on the verge of becoming the first Asian-American president. He is a third-generation Japanese-American, and grew up in Washington State. Yamaoka is a Marine veteran, having served in the Vietnam War - during which he was briefly stationed in Okinawa, where he met and embarked on a brief relationship with Tomiko.

Yamaoka is currently married to Patricia Yamaoka (nee Hampton, a patrician New England family), and is father to adopted daughter Rachel, and natal son Alex. Additionally, he is secretly the father of Takashi Jo, one of the reasons he invites Takashi to cover his presidential campaign.

Jo and Yamaoka's family

Tomiko Jo

Takashi's mother and a bartender by profession, she died in an apparent gas leak just before the story's setting.

Media

Publication

The series was originally serialized from 1997 to 2001 in the Japanese anthology Big Comic, published by Shogakukan. From 2000 to 2002, Viz Media published the English translation in monthly 100-page issues and then in five long tankōbon volumes. The series spans over 2000 pages in all. The series has also been published in France by Template:Ill, in Germany by Egmont Manga & Anime, and in Indonesia by Level Comic. In an interview with The Los Angeles Times, Kawaguchi revealed that he was inspired by watching the 1993 documentary The War Room.[2]

  1. 416 pages,
  2. 424 pages,
  3. 416 pages,
  4. 512 pages,
  5. 600 pages,

Adaptation

Template:Main A live-action South Korean television drama adaptation, directed by Kim Hyung-Il, written by Son Young-mok, and starring Choi Soo-jong, premiered in December 2010.[3]

Reception

Eagle was nominated for five Eisner Awards, including Best New Series, Best Continuing Series, Best Writer/Artist, and Best U.S. Edition of Foreign Material in 2001, and again in 2002 for Best U.S. Edition of Foreign Material. Writer Warren Ellis called it "A wild tangle of sex and secrets and hate and Machiavellian intrigue. It's Primary Colors in a really bad mood."[4]

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Kaiji Kawaguchi Template:Big Comic series

  1. Template:Cite web
  2. "I recall being amazed and feeling sweaty-palmed excitement at that depiction of a comprehensive and high-quality media strategy, which is unheard of in Japanese politics . . . I thought about how the president of the United States is selected, the world's most involved political contest. Now that's an interesting setting for a story!" (The Los Angeles Times, October 23, 2000, p. E1).
  3. Template:Cite web
  4. Template:Cite web