Shueisha
Publishing Company and Company
Tomy Corporation's Naruto™ Shippuden: Clash of Ninja® Revolution 3 Now Available on Wii™...of Japanese content. Owned by three of Japan s largest creators and licensors of manga and animation, Shueisha, Inc., Shogakukan, Inc., and Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions, Co., Ltd., Viz Media is a leader in the publishing and... In this article: Wii, Viz Media, Disney XD, Itunes, Naruto, North America, Japan, Clash of Ninja, and Shonen Jump |
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Wikipedia | October 28, 2009
Shonen Book
...in the middle of the ''Shonen Book'' timeline. ''Shonen Book'' also served as a root to many other magazines published by Shueisha. Shueisha was just getting into the business of making manga magazines, creating the magazine Omoshiro Book...
In this article: Shonen Book, Weekly Shonen Jump, Mach GoGoGo, Speed Racer, Obake no Q-taro, Osamu Tezuka, United States, Manga, and Monthly Shonen Jump
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Wikipedia | October 20, 2009
Jump Square
is a Japanese monthly ''shonen '' manga magazine with a circulation of over 500,000. Published by Shueisha, the magazine premiered on November 2, 2007 as a replacement for ''Monthly Shonen Jump'', another manga anthology that Shueisha...
In this article: Jump Square, Monthly Shonen Jump, Weekly Shonen Jump, Stan Lee, Spider-Man, Spider-Man, Karakuridoji Ultimo, Gag Manga Biyori, and Dragonaut
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Wikipedia | October 19, 2009
Shueisha
...on March 2008 and is still currently running in ''Shueisha Original''. is a one of many Kanzenban magazines published by Shueisha. ''Shueisha Remix'' magazines are split into four lines: ''Shueisha Jump Remix'', ''Shueisha Girls Remix'',...
In this article: Shonen Book, Weekly Shonen Jump, Shogakukan, Monthly Shonen Jump, Margaret Comics, Kodomo, Ribon, Non-no, and Hitotsubashi
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Ain't It Cool News: The best in movie, TV, DVD, and comic book news. | October 12, 2009
Don't Miss Dickensian/Hitchcockian Morality, Psycho-Thriller Anime Monster, Starting on Syfy Tonight
...and not written for readers the age of its subjects. Monster ran in Big Comic Original, part of manga giant Shogakukan's ( along with Shueisha, owner of Viz Media, publisher of Rumiko Takashi's frequent home, Shonen Sunday) seinen...
In this article: Monster, Surgery, Astro Boy, Vector, and Pluto
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Kotaku | October 12, 2009
Square Enix On Why Manga Doesn't Sell As Big Overseas [Square Enix]
Taguchi also went on to state that manga publishers are increasingly moving forward to digital distribution. "Publishers such as Shueisha, Kodansha, Shogakukan and Kadokawa are setting up a digital platform on the PSP for...
In this article: Square Enix, Final Fantasy, Full Metal Alchemist, Enix, Japan, US, Shogakukan, and Kodansha
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Gamespot | September 25, 2009
Sony details 250GB FFXIII PS3 bundle, PSP community
...category within the PlayStation Store. The service will feature comics from a number of major publishers including Shonen Jump's Shueisha, Shonen Sunday's Shogakukan, Shonen Magazine's Kodansha, and as somewhat expected, Square Enix.
In this article: Sony, PlayStation 3, Japan, Tokyo, UK, PSP Go, Dead Rising 2, Assassin's Creed II, Tokyo Game Show, and Neon Genesis Evangelion
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The Japan Times: All Stories | September 12, 2009
Tanikawa: A master of foreign ways and Japan's most accessible poet
...thought and emotional longing. William Elliott and Kazuo Kawamura have teamed up over the years to translate Tanikawa's poems; and Shueisha recently published two volumes in paperback. These so-called taiyaku (bilingual) editions are a...
In this article: Japan, Nobel Prize for Literature, and Shuntaro Tanikawa
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PR Newswire | September 10, 2009
Reportlinker Adds World Book Publishing Market Report
...Inc., Pearson PLC, Penguin Group, Inc., Reed Elsevier Group PLC, Scholastic, Inc., Simon & Schuster, Inc., Shogakukan, Inc., Shueisha, Inc., Thomson Reuters, W. W. Norton & Company, and Wolters Kluwer. Market data and analytics are...
In this article: Scholastic, Barnes & Noble, Inc., USA, Digital Interactive, Silver, Shogakukan, Inc, Bertelsmann AG, Cambridge University Press, and HarperCollins Publishers
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Wikipedia | August 12, 2009
Jump (magazine line)
sometimes stylized '''''JUMP''''', is a famous line of manga magazines created by Shueisha. The origin of the name is unknown. The Jump magazines are intended for the male audience, although the ''Weekly Shonen Jump'' magazine has also been...
In this article: Weekly Shonen Jump, Shonen Book, Monthly Shonen Jump, V Jump, Jump SQ., Weekly Young Jump, Business Jump, Ribon, and Super Jump
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Variety | June 19, 2008
Shueisha invests in production co.
...including "Pokemon," "Doraemon," "Inuyasha," "Hamtaro," "Detective Conan" and "Megaman. As a result of Shueisha's investment, Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions will now handle properties related to manga from both Shogakukan and Shueisha.
In this article: Shogakukan, Hamtaro, Doraemon, InuYasha, North America, and Europe
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More on Shueisha
Description from Wikipedia:
Shueisha is a major publisher in Japan, headquartered in Tokyo. The company was founded in 1925 as the entertainment-related publishing division of Japanese publisher Shogakukan. The following year Shueisha became a separate, independent company. Shueisha's Jump Comics division is a large publisher of manga.
Shueisha later founded Hakusensha, which has gone on to become another of Japan's most successful publishers.
Homesha is one of the many imprints operated by Shueisha.
Shueisha publishes the Weekly Shonen Jump magazine and organizes the Tezuka Award in Japan. Shonen Jump, begun in 1968, is the world's most popular and most successful Japanese manga magazine.
Shueisha, along with Shogakukan, owns Viz Media, which publishes manga from both companies in the United States.
The name "Shueisha" comes from the phrase Eichi ga tsudō (英知が集う), loosely translated as "gather knowledge". Shū is the on-yomi of the kanji 集.
Like Kodansha, Shueisha has close ties to the Walt Disney Company, since it has published books based on the Kingdom Hearts game. But instead of sponsoring Tokyo Disneyland like Kodansha, it sponsors all of Disney's Video Games as well as Tomy's Disney Toy Line.
Shueisha has been the main sponser and serializer of the Digimon anime series and toy lines. This is the only Japanese child-oriented franchise it has sponsered.
- Name:
- 株式会社集英社
- Type:
- Kabushiki kaisha
- Location:
- Tokyo-to, Chiyoda-ku
- Region:
- Japan
- Founded:
- 1949
- Industry:
- Publishing
- Key People:
- Hideki Yamashita (president)
- Products:
- Magazines, manga, picture books, light novels, educational books, reference books, other books
- No. of Employees:
- 824 (as of April 2008)
- Website:
- http://www.shueisha.co.jp/
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