TIZI OUZOU, Algeria (AFP) - It is a massively popular book form that originated in Japan where it became a cultural phenomenon. Now manga comics are flourishing in Algeria as well.
"The Algerian manga is our trademark," said Salim Brahimi proudly. "It's what we call the DZ manga."
Brahimi is the founder of Z-Link, Algeria's first publisher of manga comics. And Z-Link's manga are 100 percent Algerian, from the drawings to the text.
Published in French, colloquial Arabic and soon in north Africa's Berber language, DZ manga has put a distinctly local stamp on a major Japanese product.
And the comics are flying off the shelves.
"We are printing 3,000 copies per title," said Kamal Bahloul, Z-Link's representative at a book festival in the eastern city of Tizi Ouzou.
"In 2008, 40 percent of our print run was sold against 70 percent today," he added.
Since its launch in 2007, Z-Link has been increasing its catalogue -- and its staff.
"When we started this adventure there were just two of us," said Bahloul. "Now we have nearly 30 employees. We are growing five percent on average every year."
In 2008, a year after Brahimi co-founded Z-Link, he launched a key weapon in its marketing armoury: Laabstore magazine, a monthly review of Algeria's burgeoning manga, cinema and video games scene.
Laabstore runs extracts from the work of up-and-coming manga writers -- and of course also serves as a successful shop window for Z-Link's own titles, with its print run having risen from 2,000 to 10,000 copies in five years.
Japan's manga, a sometimes lurid style of comic strip, cover a wide range of themes and are massively popular both at home and abroad.
The Algerian version respects the basic ingredients of sharp humour, suspense and a hyperactive artistic style, but the scripts also add the crucial local flavour.
"The stories we deal with are typically Algerian scenes," said 28-year-old Sid Ali Oudjiane, a manga writer whose "Victory Road" series -- featuring a schoolboy's quest for sporting glory -- has already won him three national awards.
DZ's catalogue includes a variety of genres -- and claims plenty of young talent, both male and female.
"The Revolution", published in 2012 to mark the 50th anniversary of Algeria's independence from France, is one of a string of titles from 18-year-old Fella Matougui.
One of the first major successes of the local manga scene was "Samy Kun" by Yacine Haddad, about a teenager who gets mixed up in the problems of the Algerian Sahara.
But as well as the different subject matter explored by the writers, the artists have sought to break away from the purely Japanese style by bringing distinctive local touches to their work.
Despite its success, however, Algeria's DZ manga is often more of a passion to pursue than a way of earning a living -- even for the award-winning Oudjiane.
"I work on manga on the side. I can only devote my free time to it, at the weekends and at night," he said.
Likewise for manga author Amir Cheriti, whose day job is as a graphic artist in an advertising agency.
"For us, it is still for pleasure," he said.
Algeria's DZ manga has had its own special billing at prestigious industry events, including two international book fairs in the French cities of Angouleme and Montpellier.
But surely the greatest recognition so far has come from the manga Mecca itself.
This year, Japan's Kyoto International Manga Museum acquired several Algerian works, "not just to be exhibited, but also for research", said Z-Link founder Brahimi.
The influence of the Algerian brand is also attracting attention in the United States, where it is the subject of a doctoral thesis at Philadelphia University.
And there is growing interest from companies seeking to harness its marketing potential.
"Firms like Sonelgaz and Panasonic have called us about advertising illustrations," said Bahloul.
At the Tizi Ouzou book fair, Z-Link is busily raising manga's "Made in Algeria" profile, with Oudjiane displaying his skills to a group of inspired young festival-goers at one workshop.
"In 20 or 30 years, young Algerians will all have mangas and comics on their bookshelves," said Bahloul, predicting the continuation of trend that few would bet against right now.
http://news.yahoo.com/algerias-home-grown-manga-hit-young-054641890.html
my hope is that the historical trajectory of comics in algeria matches that of france, so that a decade after their interest in manga starts we get disgusting homegrown outsider-art decadence, the algerian equivalent of le dernier cri or something.
Le Dernier cri is a 2006 film from Morocco.
Synopsis
After discovering his mother's adultery, and after his father's death, a child decides to commit suicide to put an end to his suffering.
lol
le dernier cri is a press from marseille that's doing the most interesting stuff in french comics, in addition to screen prints and unclassifiable little things. they publish stuff from other countries as well. lots of their stuff is really unrefined, but occasionally they'll put out stuff from a pretty accomplished illustrator like keiti oota who wants to do something a lil out there, or someone famous like mark beyer who just likes what they do. they've recently started getting stuff from takashi nemoto and yoshikazu ebisu, two important figures in underground japanese comics, but originally their stuff was just gnarly french folks who weren't wanted anywhere else.
for a while they were the only people who'd print the larger works of mike diana, the only comics person from the us to be prosecuted for obscenity.
http://www.lederniercri.org
you can trust me. open up your arms to my embrace. open up your extremities to my magnetic pulse therapy.
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![](http://www.mikedianacomix.com/mikediana/MD_RonAthey.jpg)
![](http://www.lederniercri.org/pix/plan/otaplb2.jpg)
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Agnus_Dei posted:Anime will win. You will have no grandchildren.