Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Yasuko Sakata

From CartoonWiki

Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox artist Yasuko Sakata (坂田 靖子, Sakata Yasuko) is a Japanese manga artist. She is considered to be a successor to the Year 24 Group that is credited with renewing shōjo manga.[1]

Life

She was born on 25 February 1953 in Osaka, Japan. She now lives in Kanazawa, Ishikawa Prefecture. Her official debut was with the work Saikon Kyousou Kyoku (再婚狂騒曲), published in Hana to Yume in 1975.[2] In the late 1970s and early 1980s, she was involved in the yaoi dōjinshi movement, having co-coined the term "yaoi" with Akiko Hatsu. One of Sakata's dōjinshi, Loveri, was amongst the very first to be described as "yaoi".[3][4] Her best known works are Jikan wo Warerani, Basil Shi no Yuuga na Seikatsu (The Elegant Life of Mr Basil), about a 19th-century British aristocrat, and Yamiyo no Hon (serialized 1982-1985 in Asahi Sonorama's Duo magazine). She won the Agency for Cultural Affairs Media Arts Festival Grand Prize in the Manga Division in 1997. Most of her work is short stories - as of 2003, one catalogue listed over 40 of her stories. The type of stories she tells include traditional Japanese ghost stories, science fiction, mysteries, and Western and Chinese stories. She is marked for her talent at "casually portraying" everyday life.[2]

Works

Template:Expand Japanese

  • 再婚狂騒曲 Saikon Kyousou Kyoku
  • 闇月王 Yami Gatsuoo
  • バジル氏の優雅な生活 Basil Shi no Yuuga na Seikatsu (The Elegant Life of Mr Basil)
  • マーガレットとご主人の底抜け珍道中 maagaretto togo shujin no sokonuke chindouchuu
  • チューくんとハイちゃん chuu-kun to hai chan

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Year 24 Group

Template:Authority control


Template:Asbox

  1. Template:Cite web
  2. 2.0 2.1 Template:Cite book
  3. Template:Cite web
  4. Kotani Mari, foreword to Saitō Tamaki (2007) "Otaku Sexuality" in Christopher Bolton, Istvan Csicsery-Ronay Jr., and Takayuki Tatsumi ed., page 223 Robot Ghosts and Wired Dreams University of Minnesota Press "Around 1980, the female manga artists Sakata Yasuko and Hatsu Akiko coined this word to describe the male-male sex manga they were publishing in the magazine Rappori."