oyceter: man*ga [mahng' guh] n. Japanese comics. synonym: CRACK (manga is crack)
[personal profile] oyceter
In 1954, Albert Einstein is overcome with guilt about the role his work has played in the development of the atomic bomb. Two young boys, Hikaru and Haruhi (yes, we are still in Princeton, NJ, and no, I am still not entirely sure if the boys are Japanese-American or White-American with Japanese names), come up and tell him that they've been dreaming of the future, and in that dream, the world tree is dying, and it is protected only by a woman they know as Skuld. Skuld has told them to find a girl named Ruika, and to help them with that, Einstein gives each of the boys a pill that will make them age more slowly.

All this, by the way, is the set up.

Fast-forward to Japan 2005, and we meet a young boy named Robin, who cannot speak, and we finally meet Ruika. But instead of being the savior everyone thinks she will be, Ruika is a deeply hurt teenage girl who is living as her brother Masato for assorted reasons. And her will to be Masato is so strong that it has changed her body: she is as flat as a boy, and she has not yet menstruated. Soon, Hikaru and Robin find her and try to convince her that she will become the Skuld they've met, that's she's the key to the global garden in which the world tree grows. But Ruika has to heal her mother and herself before she can even begin to think about the world.

Although I tored through Hiwatari's Please Save My Earth, I'm still not entirely sure if I liked it, thanks to disliking several of the central characters. This series, on the other hand, I love. The first half largely concerns itself with Ruika and the ways in which she is both broken and not, and it takes the time to show Ruika's developing relationships with Hikaru and Robin, both of which are crucial to the series. I also love that much of the beginning is about Ruika's relationship with her mother, who is the reason why she has been trying to subsume herself and take on Masato's role.

There's a lot in here about pain and self-hatred and the desire to completely erase yourself from the world even as a tiny part of you wants to stay alive, and it's connected throughout with the atomic bomb, the destruction of Nagasaki and Hiroshima, and the slow death of the world tree. Saving Ruika is central to the plot, because if one girl cannot love herself enough to survive, how can she turn toward the world?

Even though the language I use here is all about "saving" Ruika, much of what actually happens is Hikaru and Robin empowering Ruika to save herself, to want to save herself. And though there is some of the gendered depictions of peace vs. war in the form of the male scientists who created the bomb and the female Skuld who guards the world tree and the global garden, the manga very clearly shows quite a few men also on the side of peace (Einstein, Hikaru, Robin). We don't get as many views of destructive women, although I'd argue that the destructiveness is embodied in Ruika herself, along with the promise of healing.

Hiwatari manages to bring it all together in a cathartic conclusion, and only weeks later did I notice that the focus shifts away from the bomb completely. I wish the conclusion were more tied in with the atomic bomb, but ah well. There's also one aspect of the ending that bothers me a little on the feminist side, but I am still deciding if it only invokes a trope and does something with it, or if it simply invokes the trope.

Still, highly recommended, although it may work best to binge on it (I still can't believe I read 8 volumes in two days... in Chinese! In Chinese with complicated ideas about time travel and clones and whatnot!). Also, because I am picky about art, I note that the art here is very different from that of Please Save My Earth, and that I liked it quite a bit.

(no subject)

Sat, Jan. 31st, 2009 02:16 am (UTC)
ext_150: (Default)
Posted by [identity profile] kyuuketsukirui.livejournal.com
Eee! I really love this series a lot. :D Hiwatari Saki really has a knack for writing stories that have a bunch of elements I really love. This has time travel! And genderbending! And reincarnation! And best friends who become enemies!

Hikaru and Haruhi are Japanese-American. It does specify that somewhere, IIRC. Their parents work at the university or something.

What was your problem with the ending? It's been so long since I've read it, I don't remember anything about the end other than Robin being reincarnated as her son (and even that I'm not sure of; I just know it was something along those lines).

(no subject)

Sat, Jan. 31st, 2009 03:38 am (UTC)
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] larryhammer
I really like this series as well (it's closer in style to Tower of the Future than Please Save My Earth), but English scans are still stuck in volume 6. I was especially blown away when we got the imagery of the Hiroshima bomb as Yggdrisil burning. Binging sounds like a good way to read it. I did, the first four volumes.

---L.

(no subject)

Sat, Jan. 31st, 2009 08:12 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] marfisa.livejournal.com
The "genderbending girl assumes identity of her own brother for reasons related to her mother" element is also present in the Korean manhwa "I.N.V.U.," which TokyoPop finally released the fourth and final volume of a year or so ago after a hiatus of three or four years. The impersonation doesn't go as far there, but it's possible the "I.N.V.U." mangaka was inspired by "Global Garden," since another "I.N.V.U." plotline struck me as suspiciously similar to an analogous one in "Mars."

(no subject)

Mon, Feb. 2nd, 2009 06:00 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] thomasyan.livejournal.com
Aw, I want to read this, but I can't read Chinese.

Heh, and I probably can't find someone to read it to me.

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