Mangajin

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Mangajin was an American magazine that described itself as "Japanese pop culture and language learning". The title is a pun on "manga", -Jin (person), and the Japanese pronunciation of "magazine". The magazine ran 70 issues from June 1990 to December 1997. It had articles about Japan and Japan-related media, but its prominent feature was the line-by-line and word-by-word annotated translations of various manga series, meant to teach Japanese to Westerners and to some extent, English to Japanese people. Regular columns also used manga-related examples. Manga used in this magazine included chapters of series otherwise not available in English in any other format, even today.

Covers for the magazine were typically drawn in the style of Japanese woodblock prints, as seen in the page image.

The magazine started before the anime and manga boom reached the West, at a time when Japan Takes Over the World was still a going concern, and was mostly geared towards business- and culture-related manga, with relatively little fan-oriented material. It also sold issues in Japan. The magazine died out when the contraction of the Japanese economy and the change in Western interest in Japan killed the magazine's audience.

The magazine also published some books, language-learning tapes, and CD-ROMs.

The magazine has vanished even from the web but the previous home page is still visible on archive.org.

Fan-friendly series (of the time--they predate modern manga fandom) that received chapters in Mangajin included

The magazine also occasionally used Japanese versions of American cartoons such as The Far Side and Calvin and Hobbes.

Tropes used in Mangajin include: