Shueisha
Publishing Company and Company
Death Note...detective known to the world only as L . Death Note was first serialized in 108 chapters by Shueisha in the Japanese manga magazine Weekly Shonen Jump from December 2003 to May 2006. The series was also published in tankobon format... In this article: Death Note, Light Yagami, Tetsuro Araki, Mello, Toshiki Inoue, Near, and Japan |
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Wikipedia | November 03, 2009
Weekly Shonen Jump
...Shonen Jump which replaced Shonen Book Weekly Shonen Jump was launched by Shueisha on July 2 1968 to compete with the already-successful Weekly Shonen Magazine and Weekly Shonen Sunday. The Weekly Shonen Jump's sister publication was...
In this article: Weekly Shonen Jump, Shonen Book, Monthly Shonen Jump, Jump Square, Naruto, One Piece, Hikaru no Go, and Dragon Ball
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Gamespot | September 25, 2009
Sony details 250GB FFXIII PS3 bundle, PSP community
...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. Some of titles to be...
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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Wikipedia | June 06, 2009
Banzai! (magazine)
...Verlag, from November 2001 to December 2005. It debuted in November 2001 as a German language adaptation of the popular Japanese manga anthology Weekly Shonen Jump, published by Shueisha. In addition to various series from Weekly Shonen...
In this article: Banzai!, Weekly Shonen Jump, Carlsen Verlag, Tokyopop, and Germany
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Wikipedia | June 18, 2009
Masaya Tokuhiro
Masaya Tokuhiro '' is a notable mangaka working for various magazines within the Shueisha lines, including Weekly Shonen Jump and Super Jump ''. Born in Otoyo in the prefecture of Kochi on March 1, 1959, he originally got notice from a...
In this article: Tarzan, Super Jump, Akatsuka Award, Weekly Shonen Jump, and Edgar Rice Burroughs
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Wikipedia | October 25, 2009
Viz Media
...2003 cover date. Based on the popular Japanese anthology Weekly Shonen Jump, published by Shueisha, Shonen Jump is retooled for English readers and the American audience and is published monthly, instead of weekly. It features serialized...
In this article: Viz Media, Shogakukan, Dragon Ball, Shojo Beat, DVD, Cartoon Network, Animerica, and Shonen Jump
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Wikipedia | October 28, 2009
Shonen Book
...Book is a manga magazine by Shueisha, which debuted March 1958 and ended in April 1969. ''Shonen Book'' was originally a spin-off of Shueisha's . ''Shonen Book'' is famously known in Japan for being the predecessor to the company's famous...
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 | November 03, 2009
YuYu Hakusho
...was the first thing that came to his mind. The YuYu Hakusho manga series was written and drawn by Togashi and published originally by Shueisha in the Japanese magazine Weekly Shonen Jump. The manga consists on ninenteen collected volumes...
In this article: Yusuke Urameshi, YuYu Hakusho, Kuwabara, Funimation Entertainment, Kurama, Hiei, Genkai, and Enma
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Wikipedia | November 05, 2009
Gin Tama
...chapters identified as a "Lesson" have been serialized. Shueisha is also publishing the first chapters of Gin Tama online on their Weekly Shonen Jump official website. Viz Media licensed Gin Tama for publication in North America. A...
In this article: Gin Tama, Weekly Shonen Jump, DVD, Gintama, Japan, Crunchyroll, North America, and TV Tokyo
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Wikipedia | August 12, 2009
Jump (magazine line)
...as spin-off issues of the Weekly Young Jump magazine. In 1993, Shueisha announced and released the video game/manga magazine V Jump alongside the Jump light novel line Jump j-Books. In 2003 Shogakukan's Viz Media released an English...
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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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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