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1

Buxton, William J. "The parsons/tominaga “colloquy” at Iwanami Shoten 1." American Sociologist 31, no. 2 (June 2000): 43–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12108-000-1019-7.

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2

Onzo, Miho. "Haruaki Deguchi, Life Insurance-New Edition, Iwanami Shoten, Publishers, Tokyo, 2009, 268p." Hokengakuzasshi (JOURNAL of INSURANCE SCIENCE) 2010, no. 609 (2010): 609_141–609_142. http://dx.doi.org/10.5609/jsis.2010.609_141.

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3

Hoshino, Akio. "Review of Toru Maruyama’s Reading Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations (Iwanami Shoten, 2011)." History of Economic Thought 56, no. 2 (2015): 113–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.5362/jshet.56.2_113.

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4

Ward, Vanessa B. "The spectre of the left: Iwanami shoten, ideology and publishing in early postwar Japan." Japanese Studies 26, no. 2 (September 2006): 171–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10371390600883578.

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De-min, Tao. "Review of Amerika to Chūgoku - America and China by MATSUO Fumio. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, January 2017." Journal of Cultural Interaction in East Asia 8, no. 1 (May 1, 2017): 83–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jciea-2017-080109.

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Koseki, Takeshi. "Yoichi Sumi, L’Encyclopédie et les panoramas du monde,Tokyo,Iwanami-Shoten, 2009, xii-298-18 p." Recherches sur Diderot et sur l'Encyclopédie, no. 45 (December 15, 2010): 208–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/rde.4781.

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ITO, Masako. "HAYASE Shinzo, Globalizing Yasukuni Shrine Controversy from the Perspective of Southeast Asia, Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 2018." Southeast Asia: History and Culture 2019, no. 48 (2019): 83–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.5512/sea.2019.48_83.

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Aoki, Yukihiro. "Mizukoshi, K. (2022). <i>Aid Consumption: Power to Create a Society</i>. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten. (In Japanese)." Japan Marketing Journal 43, no. 4 (March 29, 2024): 110–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.7222/marketing.2024.022.

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FUJITA, Sei. "Tsuneaki SATO, Post-shakaishugi no Keizai Taisei [Economic Systems of Post-socialism], Iwanami Shoten, Tokyo, 1997, v+303 pp." Japanese Slavic and East European Studies 19 (1998): 125–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.5823/jsees.19.0_125.

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10

Caprio, Mark. "Kankoku heigōshi no kenkyū.(Research on the history of Korean annexation). By Unno Fukuju. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 2000. xviii, 407 pp. ¥ 7000 (cloth)." Journal of Asian Studies 61, no. 4 (November 2002): 1395–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3096495.

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Horie, Norio. "Kazuhiro Kumo, Roshia Jinko no rekishi to genzai (Population of Russia: From Past to Present), Tokyo, Iwanami Shoten, 2014, 173 + xv pp." Japanese Slavic and East European Studies 35 (2014): 139–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.5823/jsees.35.0_139.

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Chiu, Pengsheng. "Kahei shisutemu no sekaishi: “hi taishōsei” o yomu (World History of Monetary System: From a Standpoint of Asymmetry). By Akinobu Kuroda. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 2003." International Journal of Asian Studies 2, no. 2 (June 30, 2005): 337–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s147959140517017x.

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NAGATA, Atsumasa. "MATSUO Masaki and MORI Chikako (eds.), <i>Relational Studies on Global Crises 6: New Phases of International Migration,</i> Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 2020." Southeast Asia: History and Culture 2022, no. 51 (2022): 57–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.5512/sea.2022.51_57.

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14

Naka, Shuhei. "The Origin of Sociology of Occupation and the Historical Development of Social Stratification and Mobility Research in Japan, Shokugyou syakaigaku (Sociology of Occupation), by Kunio Odaka. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1941, pp. 497." International Journal of Japanese Sociology 24, no. 1 (June 11, 2013): 124–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijjs.12015.

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15

Kaneko, F. "Kankoku Heigo-shi no Kenkyu (Studies in the History of the Annexation of Korea), by Unno Fukuju. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 2000, xviii+411 pp., 7,400 yen (hardback ISBN 4-00-002846-4)." Social Science Japan Journal 7, no. 2 (September 3, 2004): 294–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ssjj/jyh035.

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16

Macfarlane, D. L. M. "An intellectual history of wartime Japan 1931–1945. By Shunsuke Tsurumi. (Japanese Studies Series.) pp. viii, 136. London etc., KPI, 1986. (First published in Japanese in 1982 by Iwanami Shoten, Tokyo.) £20.00." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland 119, no. 1 (January 1987): 180–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0035869x0016770x.

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17

Tankha, Brij. "IV Book Reviews : OMOTO KEIICHI, HAMASHITA TAKESHI, MURAI YOSHINORI, YAJIMA HIKOICHI (Eds), Umi no aija 5-Ekkyo suru nettowaku (Maritime Asia: Trans-border Networks). Iwanami Shoten, Tokyo, 2001, 279 pp. Y3,000 (approx. Rs 1,000)." China Report 37, no. 4 (November 2001): 530–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000944550103700408.

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18

Nish, Ian. "Nobuko Margaret Kosuge, Popi to Sakura: Nichi-Ei wakai wo tsumugi-naosu [Poppies and Cherry-blossoms: Spinning the Bitter Memories into British-Japanese Reconciliation], Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 2008, 336 + 8 pps, ISBN-13: 978-4000247665." Japanese Journal of Political Science 10, no. 2 (August 2009): 242–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1468109909003557.

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19

Wachutka, Michael. "Kokka shintō to Nihonjin 国家神道と日本人 (State Shintō and the Japanese). By Shimazono Susumu 島薗進. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 2010. xiv + 237 pages. ISBN 978 4 00 431259 8." Journal of Religion in Japan 2, no. 2-3 (2013): 285–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22118349-12341251.

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20

Uzawa, H. "Toshi to Ryokuchi: Atarashii Toshi Kankyo no Sozo ni Mukete (Cities and Green Spaces: Towards the Creation of a New Urban Environment), by Ishikawa Mikiko. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 2001, 385pp, 4,600 yen (hardcover ISBN 4-000-24117-6)." Social Science Japan Journal 6, no. 2 (October 1, 2003): 281–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ssjj/6.2.281.

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Xiao-Planes, Xiaohong. "Ishikawa (Yoshihiro) – The Formation of the Chinese Communist Party . Traduit par Joshua A. Fogel. – New York, Columbia University Press, 2012 (1 re éd. japonaise : Chugoku kyosanto seiritsu shi , Tokyo, Iwanami shoten, 2001). xvi + 504 p. Illustrations. Annexes. Bibliogr. Index." Revue française de science politique Vol. 64, no. 6 (November 27, 2014): XXXIII. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rfsp.646.1224zg.

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Francks, Penelope. "Hikaku keizai hatten ron: rekishiteki apurōchi 比較経済発展論:歴史的アプローチ (Theory of Comparative Economic Development: An Historical Approach). By Saitō Osamu 斉藤修. Iwanami Shoten, 2008. Pp. xiv + 334. ISBN 10: 4000099159; 13: 9784000099158." International Journal of Asian Studies 7, no. 1 (January 2010): 114–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1479591409990325.

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Welter, Albert. "Goroku no shisōshi: Chūgoku Zen no kenkyū 語録の思想史――中国禅の研究. By Ogawa Takashi 小川 隆. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 2011; xvi + 450, plus 26 pages of indices and charts. ISBN 10: 4000229087; 13: 9784000229081." International Journal of Asian Studies 9, no. 2 (July 2012): 257–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1479591412000125.

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24

Ebizuka, Akira. "Nobuo Okishio, Le capitalisme moderne et l’économie politique. Tokyo, 1986, Iwanami-Shotén, 224 p." Actuel Marx 2, no. 2 (1987): 96. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/amx.002.0096.

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Coleman, D. C. "In Search of the Spirit of Capitalism: An Essay on Max Weber's Protestant Ethic Thesis. By Gordon Marshall. New York: Columbia University Press, 1982. Pp. 236. $22.50 cloth; $10.00 paper. - The Spirit of Capitalism: The Max Weber Thesis in an Economic Historical Perspective. By Hisao Otsuka (translated by Masaomi Kondo). Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1982. Pp. x, 180." Journal of Economic History 46, no. 2 (June 1986): 577–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700046738.

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26

Takenaga, Susumu. "Wataru Hiromatsu (éd.), Lire le Capital-Système des Réifications Capitalistes, Iwanami-Shotén, Tokyo, 1986, 609 p." Actuel Marx 2, no. 2 (1987): 91. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/amx.002.0091.

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27

Shimazu, N. "Kindai Nihon no Kokka Koso: 1871-1936 (The Concept of the State in Modern Japan 1871-1936), by Banno Junji. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1996, xvii + 250 pp., 4,700 yen (hardcover ISBN 4-00-002757-3)and Democracy in Pre-War Japan: Concepts of Government, 1871-1937: Collected Essays, by Banno Junji. London: Routledge, 2001, 200 pp., $90.00 (hardcover ISBN 0415228646)." Social Science Japan Journal 5, no. 1 (April 1, 2002): 129–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ssjj/05.1.129.

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28

Vickers, Edward. "Hinsha o kurau kuni – Chuugoku kakusa shakai kara no keikoku (The Country that Devours its Poor: A Warning from China's Divided Society). Ako Tomoko. Tokyo: Shinchosha, 2009. 202 pp. ISBN 978-4-10-318331-0 - Kyouiku wa fubyoudou wo kokufuku dekiru ka (Can Education Overcome Inequality?). Sonoda Shigeto and Shimbo Atsuko. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 2010. 176 pp. ISBN 978-4-00-028258-1." China Quarterly 204 (December 2010): 1006–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741010001190.

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29

Lory, Pierre. "Consciousness and Reality  Studies in Memory of Toshihiko Izutsu. Tokyo, Iwanami Shoten Publishers, 1998, XV + 472 p." Abstracta Iranica, Volume 22 (May 15, 2001). http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/abstractairanica.36807.

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30

McClelland, Gwyn. "“Whether my Body Breaks or the Plum Tree Withers”: Iwanaga Maki, Social Welfare Pioneer, and the jūjikai Women's Religious Order." Journal of Religious History, April 25, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-9809.13047.

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Maria Iwanaga Maki (1849–1920) was 23 years old in 1873 when she returned home after a community exile and persecutions of more than 3000 people carried out by the Meiji government. Historians in the public record refer to Iwanaga as otoko‐masari (man‐nish) when she stood up to a representative of the Shogun, while in her public work she became known as the sister of the intersection. She was a social‐work pioneer, believed to have cared for upwards of 900 children. During her family's imprisonment in Bizen (Okayama), Iwanaga's younger sister, Fui, and her father died. Iwanaga and her compatriots started the jūjikai Cross Society, that was the first Japanese Catholic women's order post‐persecution in 1879, working to assist those affected by epidemics and beginning one of, if not the first orphanage in the Meiji era in Japan. In this article by including a family tree, I consider how memory and emotion is transmitted across generations, drawing on Marianne Hirsch's “postmemory,” in the light of the narratives about Iwanaga. I examine three primary sources, including two spoken records and a photograph, to better understand the emotional person of Iwanaga, and her institution of onnabeya, or women's rooms.
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31

Hand, Richard J. "Dissecting the Gash." M/C Journal 7, no. 4 (October 1, 2004). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.2389.

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Given that the new advances in technology in the 1980s had a major impact on the carefully constructed myth of authenticity in horror and pornography, ranging from flawless special effects at one extreme to the idea of the handheld voyeur movie at the other, it is rather ironic that the key progenitor to the erotic-grotesque form is a long-established and in some ways basic form: the pen and paper art of manga. This medium can be traced back to pillow books and the illustrated tradition in Japanese culture – a culture where even written language has evolved from drawings rather than alphabetical ciphers. Technological innovation notwithstanding, the 1980s is an extraordinary period for manga and it is perhaps here that we find the most startling hybridisation of porn and horror where, to borrow a phrase from Liz Kotz, “pathology meets pleasure, where what we most fear is what we most desire” (Kotz 188). Many of the most extreme examples of 1980s manga repeatedly confront the reader with tales that intersperse and interlink imagery and narrative sequences of sex, violence and the abject. Suehiro Maruo is in many ways a commercially marginalised but highly renowned manga artist of the erotic-grotesque. His full-length manga novel Mr Arashi’s Amazing Freak Show (1984) is a sweeping tale of carnival freaks redolent with sex and sadism, but in this article I will address his short comic strips from around the same period. The stories collected in Suehiro Maruo’s Ultra-Gash Inferno (2001) present a mortifying vision of sex and horror with stories that draw on the erotically tinged world of classical Japanese theatre and the short fiction of Edogawa Rampo but push them into the domain of extreme pornography. In “Putrid Night” (1981), an abusive man, Todoroki, subjects his teenage wife, Sayoko, to vicious cunnilingus and anal sex. In one sequence, Sayoko gives oral sex while Todoroki runs a samurai sword across her cheek. In her misery, Sayoko finds true love in the teenage boy Michio. Their illicit sexual love is tender and fulfilling and yet the imagery that intersperses it is ominous: when they have sex in a field, their conjoined bodies are juxtaposed with rotting fruit infested with ants and Michio’s erect penis is juxtaposed with a serpent in the grass. Sayoko and Michio plot to murder Todoroki. The result is disastrous, with Todoroki cutting off the arms of his wife and her lover through the elbows, and lancing their eyeballs. In the carnage, Todoroki has sex with Sayoko. The young lovers do not die, and Todoroki keeps them alive in a cell as “pets” (19). In a grotesque triumph of true love, Todoroki, to his horror, spies on his two victims and sees them, their eye sockets and arm stumps pouring blood, tenderly making love. In “Shit Soup” (1982), Maruo produces a comic strip with no story as such and is therefore a highly simplistic pornographic narrative. We witness a menage a trois with a young woman and her two male lovers and the comic presents their various exploits. In their opening bout, the woman squeezes a cow’s eyeball into her vagina and one man sucks it out of her while the other licks her beneath the eyelid. Later, the three excrete onto dinner plates and dine upon their mixed shit. The story ends with the three laughing deliriously as they fall from a cliff, an emblem of their joyful abandon and the intersection of love and death. As epilogue, Maruo describes the taste of excrement and invites us to taste our own. This ending is an ingenious narrative decision, as it turns on the reader and strives to deny us – the viewer/voyeur – any comfortable distance: we are invited, as it were, to eat shit literally and if we refuse, we can eat shit metaphorically. Suehiro Maruo’s work can also be subtle: in what looks like a realistic image at the opening of “A Season in Hell” (1981), a dead teenage girl lies, covered in “gore and faeces” (45), on a grassy path which resembles the hairy opening to female sexual organs. The surrounding field is like a pudenda and the double arch of the nearby bridge resembles breasts. Maruo can thus outwit the censorship tradition in which pubic hair is generally forbidden (it does appear in some of Maruo’s comic strips), although erections, ejaculations and hairless openings and organs would seem to be always graphically permissible. Probably the most excessive vision in Ultra-Gash Inferno is “The Great Masturbator” (1982). In this, Suehiro Maruo presents a family in which the father repeatedly dresses his daughter up as a schoolgirl in order to rape her, even cutting a vagina-sized hole into her abdomen. Eventually, he slices her with numerous openings so that he can penetrate her with his fists as well as his penis. Meanwhile, her brother embarks on an incestuous relationship with his ancient aunt. After her death, he acquires her false teeth and uses them to masturbate. He ejaculates onto her grave, splitting his head open on the tombstone. The excess and debauchery make it a shocking tale, a kind of violent manga reworking of Robert Crumb’s cartoon “The family that lays together, stays together” (91) from Snatch 2 (January 1969). Like Crumb, we could argue that Maruo employs explicit sexual imagery and an ethos of sexual taboo with the same purpose of transgressing and provoking the jargon of particular social norms. The political dimension to Maruo’s work finds its most blatant treatment in “Planet of the Jap” (1985), anthologised in Comics Underground Japan (1996). This manga strip is a devastating historical-political work presented as a history lesson in which Japan won the Second World War, having dropped atomic bombs on Los Angeles and San Francisco. The comic is full of startling iconic imagery such as the Japanese flag being hoisted over the shell-pocked Statue of Liberty and the public execution of General MacArthur. Of course, this being Maruo, there is a pornographic sequence. In a lengthy and graphic episode, an American mother is raped by Japanese soldiers while her son is murdered. As these horrors are committed, the lyrics of a patriotic song about present-day Japan, written by the Ministry of Education, form the textual narrative. Although the story could be seen as a comment on the subjection of Japan at the end of the Second World War – a sustained ironic inversion of history – it seems more likely to be a condemnation of the phase of Japanese history when, tragically, a minority of “atavistic, chauvinistic, racist warmongers” secured for themselves a position of “ideological legitimacy and power” (Lehmann 213). However, Maruo is being deliberately provocative to his contemporary reader: he writes this story in the mid-1980s, the peak of Japan’s post-war prosperity. As Joy Hendry says, Japan’s “tremendous economic success” in this period is not just important for Japan but marks an “important element of world history” (Hendry 18). Maruo ends “Planet of the Jap” with a haunting international message: “Don’t be fooled. Japan is by no means a defeated nation. Japan is still the strongest country in the world” (124). The porn-horror creator Suehiro Maruo follows in the tradition of figures like Octave Mirbeau, Georges Bataille and Robert Crumb who have used explicit pornography and sexual taboo as a forum for political provocation. The sexual horror of Maruo’s erotic-grotesque manga may terrify some readers and titillate others. It may even terrify and titillate at the same time in a disturbing fusion which has social and political implications: all the Maruo works in this essay were produced in the early to mid-1980s, the peak of Japanese economic success. They also coincide with the boom years of the Japanese sex industry, which Akira Suei argues was terminated by the repressive legislation of the New Amusement Business Control and Improvement Act of 1985 (Suei, 10). Suei’s account of the period paints one of frivolity and inventiveness embodied in the phenomenon of “no-panties coffee shops” (10) and the numerous sex clubs which offered extraordinary “role-playing opportunities” (13). The mood is one of triumph for the sexual expression of the customers but also for the extremely well-paid sex workers. Maruo’s stories contemporaneous with this have their own freedom of sexual expression, creating a vision where sexually explicit images comment upon a wide variety of subjects, from the family, scatological taboos, through to national history and Japan’s economic success. At the same time as presenting explicit sex as a feature in his films, Maruo always closely weaves it in with the taboo of death. Martin Heidegger interprets human existence as Sein-zum-Tode (being-towards-death) (Kearney 35): in Maruo’s vision, existence is evidently one of sexual-being-towards-death. Like Suehiro Maruo’s hideously maimed and blind lovers, humanity always returns to the impulse of its sexuality and the desire/will to orgasm: what Maruo calls “the cosmic gash” of physical love, a gash which also reveals, in a Heideggerian sense, the non-being that is the only certainty of existence. And we should remember that even when love is blind, someone will always be watching. References Crumb, Robert. The Complete Crumb, Volume 5: Happy Hippy Comix. Seattle: Fantagraphics, 1990. Hendry, Joy. Understanding Japanese Society. London: Routledge, 1987. Kearney, Richard. Modern Movements in European Philosophy. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1986. Kotz, Liz. “Complicity: Women Artists Investigating Masculinity” in Paula Church Gibson (ed.) More Dirty Looks: Gender, Pornography and Power (Second Edition). London, BFI, 2004, 188-203. Lehmann, Jean-Pierre. The Roots of Modern Japan. London: Macmillan, 1982. Maruo, Suehiro. “Planet of the Jap” in Quigley, Kevin (ed.). Comics Underground Japan. New York: Blast Books, 1992. —-. Mr Arashi’s Amazing Freak Show. New York: Blast, 1992. —-. Ultra-Gash Inferno. London: Creation, 2001 Mizuki, Shigeru. Youkai Gadan. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1992. Rampo, Edogawa. Japanese Tales of Mystery and Imagination. New York: Tuttle, 1956. Suei, Akira “The Lucky Hole as the Black Hole” in Nobuyoshi Araki. Araki: Tokyo Lucky Hole. Köln: Taschen, 1997, 10-15. MLA Style Hand, Richard J. "Dissecting the Gash: Sexual Horror in the 1980s and the Manga of Suehiro Maruo." M/C Journal 7.4 (2004). 10 October 2004 <http://www.media-culture.org.au/0410/05_horror.php>. APA Style Hand, R. (2004 Oct 11). Dissecting the Gash: Sexual Horror in the 1980s and the Manga of Suehiro Maruo, M/C Journal, 7(4). Retrieved Oct 10 2004 from <http://www.media-culture.org.au/05_horror.php>
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