MEDAKA BOX
STATUS
COMPLETE
VOLUMES
22
RELEASE
April 27, 2013
CHAPTERS
194
DESCRIPTION
Kurokami Medaka, a first year, is elected as Student Council President, and the first thing she does is establish a suggestion box, later dubbed by students the "Medaka Box". Medaka encourages students to submit any problem to the box without hesitation and promises to take on any issue from anyone.
Since Medaka won the Student Council elections with a staggering 98% of the vote, she ends up as the Council's only member. She asks her childhood friend, Hitoyoshi Zenkichi, for help and he grudgingly agrees, becoming the Student Council's lowest ranking member. Soon Medaka recruits two more people to the Student Council, the former judo club member Akune Kouki as secretary and the current swim club member Kikaijima Mogana, on loan for 300 yen a day, as treasurer.
Now the Student Council members spend their days solving the problems submitted through the Medaka Box, whether they be hooligans in clubs where they don't belong, girls who need help writing love letters or people who've lost their pets, gradually earning the respect and admiration of the entire school.
Included chapters:
Volume 15 contains the gaiden "Good Loser Kumagawa" (グッドルーザー球磨川); Jump NEXT (2011/12/26)
Volume 22 contains the gaiden "Good Loser Kumagawa Final" (完結編).
CAST
Misogi Kumagawa
Medaka Kurokami
Najimi Ajimu
Zenkichi Hitoyoshi
Hansode Shiranui
Youka Naze
Mogana Kikaijima
Kouki Akune
Mukae Emukae
Myouri Unzen
Namanie Nienami
Maguro Kurokami
Kamome Tsurubami
Nekomi Nabeshima
Oudo Miyakonojou
Saki Sukinasaki
Itami Koga
Kenna Yatsushiro
Myouga Unzen
Kei Munakata
Iihiko Shishime
Harigane Onigase
Hitomi Hitoyoshi
Miri Natayama
Hanten Shiranui
CHAPTERS
RELATED TO MEDAKA BOX
REVIEWS
COOLRANCH38975
84/100Medaka Box is not a "deconstruction", it's a satire, or at least that's how I m reading it as.Continue on AniListMedaka Box: the "DECONSTRUCTION" of Shonen
I first read this manga back when I was 16 years old, and at the time I didn't fully understand it. I followed the discussions online, calling it this great "deconstruction" of Shonen Jump manga with its 4th wall breaks and blatant shit-talk of older titles. I identified a bit too hard with Kumagawa and his "good loser" mentality. However as a grown ass adult who pays taxes and engages in wage slavery every weekday, my reread of the manga has convinced me that this is no "deconstruction" but a full blown satire. By "satire", I mean the Jonathan Swift type, that just presents something and expects you to find it ridiculous without necessarily having to directly tell you what it's making fun of. "Deconstruction" is honestly a made up fandom term that only children and adults who think like children use to make themselves feel smart without having the substance to back it up. Medaka Box presents itself as what most shonen fans at the time would call the "ideal" shonen manga in a straight-forward manner, but this presentation is ultimately hiding a satirical critique of shonen stories.
Medaka Box is presented in a way that shonen fans would generally call well-crafted so a straight-forward reading is technically possible, even if it's inevitably not the ideal. There's plentiful creative paneling that conveys both action and the characters' emotions. In fact, the fights in general are pretty creative in their approach. They have a combination of tactics and brute force that make for an entertaining time. Akira Akatsuki shows his hentai experience with how he draws the girl characters with their hard-coded hourglass figures, cutesy (in the hentai way yes you know what I mean) faces, and constant panty-shots. I'm sure if I were a straight guy I might have enjoyed the eye candy. Characters are over the top and edgy. The plot is structured in a way that allows combat to solve all the problems, with the characters enjoying the fighting the same way they would a sport. There are plenty of twists and turns, along with flashbacks, tearjerkers, and gestures towards grand concepts and themes. Regardless of anyone's value judgements for these traits, they are present in this manga.
What makes this presentation "ideal" is related to what people wanted in their shonen during the time period. Medaka Box was serialized from 2008-2013, which was a very interesting time for shonen fandom. Here in the English speaking world, people constantly complained about how popular shonen manga would use tropes like the power of friendship and illogical plot solutions for fantasy battles because they believed that these storytelling elements somehow made any series they appeared in shallower and more childish than series that they don't appear in. However, they still ultimately wanted a shonen story at the end of the day, so instead of moving on, they complained. The people wanted their commercialized cartoons for teenage boys to have "dark", "mature", and "self-aware" concepts implemented. They would get mad at Naruto for not being like Breaking Bad or Game of Thrones. The word "deconstruction" got introduced into the lexicon and singlehandedly inspired anitubers to create the worst arguments known to the internet. While I don't know Japanese and am not the most familiar with Japanese anime fandoms, a number of manga and anime that prioritized shock value over all else started popping up during the time period such as Attack on Titan, Mirai Nikki, etc so I can only imagine they came to a similar conclusion. Medaka box, being serialized at the same time that this mentality was the norm in fandom spaces, fits the mold for many of these ideal traits. The characters make plenty of self-aware quips about Shonen Jump. Dark concepts like incest are present and accounted for. The edge is ramped up for many characters. These characteristics are here while executing the "shonen formula" of the time: A teenager who was born special does slice of life shit to introduce themselves and the rest of the main cast for the first arc, the series pivots to battle-centric storytelling as the cast fights against a evil-for-evil's sake villain, the cast fights an edgier yet sympathetic villain, and all of this eventually escalates to the point that the protagonist fights god. All of this with plenty of friendship speeches, last-minute power-ups, and objectified women along the way. In a nutshell, shonen fandom wanted a by-the-books shonen story, but with irony poisoning and shock value so that they wouldn't feel embarrassed for liking a children's IP.
The satire of Medaka Box lies in the fact that it delivered exactly that. If read in a straight-forward way, this is a series that presents itself as this idealized shonen story. It has all the theoretical building blocks of what people at the time wanted in their shonen, and in practice it's riddled with thematic contradictions due to having to conform to this standard. There's an entire arc about how treating Medaka like an object of worship and adoration is bad, but the constant fanservice angles downplays this theme. Kumagawa bemoans his role as a destined loser and tries to fight against it, but ultimately loses anyway and just gives up to become the pervert gag character. Characters talk about how unrealistic battle manga are while doing unrealistic bullshit. Various characters preach about challenging their roles in society, while still ending up conforming to some kind of role in the end (Medaka who is basically the most powerful being in the universe can't even defy basic gender roles and every character becomes some kind of wage slave).
The final product is a big nothing burger if looked at in this way!
I am of the opinion that "generic" shonen, despite whatever gripes I have with them, can still have good stories that are worth acknowledging because they are told sincerely. In the straight-forward reading, Medaka Box's attempts to conform to shonen storytelling conventions while attempting to add the desired "adult themes" and "self-awareness" of the era end up making it look shallower than its "generic" contemporaries. I am reading this as a satire though, so I consider these storytelling elements effective in conveying a message: a critique of shonen.
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SCORE
- (3.85/5)
TRAILER
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Ended inApril 27, 2013
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