Dame Oyaji

Dame Oyaji

The cover of Dame Oyaji volume 18.
ダメおやじ
Genre Comedy
Manga
Written by Mitsutoshi Furuya
Published by Akebono Shuppan
Shogakukan
Demographic Shōnen
Magazine Weekly Shōnen Sunday
Original run September 23, 1970July 28, 1982
Volumes 39 (21 from Akebono and 18 from Shogakukan)
Anime television series
Directed by Fumio Ikeno
Hisashi Sakaguchi
Studio Knack Productions
Network TV Tokyo
Original run April 2, 1974 October 9, 1974
Episodes 26

Dame Oyaji (ダメおやじ, lit. "No Good Dad") is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Mitsutoshi Furuya. It was serialized by Shogakukan in Shōnen Sunday from September 23, 1970 (issue 43) to July 28, 1982 (issue 30). Dame Oyaji received the 1979 Shogakukan Manga Award for shōnen manga.[1] The manga was compiled in 39 volumes, with Akebono Shuppan publishing the first 21 volumes under their Akebono Comics label and Shogakukan publishing the final 18 volumes under their Shōnen Sunday Comics label. All 39 volumes are available in eBook format via eBook Japan, the Shogakukan volumes (starting with volume 4) subtitled as the "My Way" arc.

Dame Oyaji is the story of Damesuke Amano, a hapless office worker who faces a tremendous amount of bullying on the job and especially at home, where he has (contrary to traditional Japanese notions of family) absolutely no power or say in the runnings of the household whatsoever. Amano lives with his wife, Onibaba, his beautiful teenaged daughter Yukiko, and his grade-schooler son Takobo. Onibaba is an imposing, violent heifer of a woman who regularly berates and even physically assaults her husband and who enjoys nothing more than making his life miserable; Yukiko and Takobo frequently join in physically and psychologically abusing their father. The original manga is said to have been quite shocking to early 1970s Japan, in which the father was often still traditionally regarded as the head of the household.

The series was adapted as a 26-episode anime television series broadcast on Tokyo 12 Channel (now TV Tokyo) between April 2 and October 9, 1974. Each half-hour episode comprised two shorter stories of approximately ten minutes in length. The anime toned down the original manga's level of violence considerably for a prime-time TV audience (although it is still quite violent) and featured episodes which focused more on Takobo and his everyday school and home life. The Takobo-focused episodes in particular are kinder and gentler than the series as a whole (for example, an episode in which Takobo fears losing his sister Yukiko, whom he idolizes, to marriage and, after trying various tactics to ruin her relationship with a potential suitor, runs away from home).

References

  1. 小学館漫画賞:歴代受賞者 (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved 2009-01-25.

External links

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