A HISTÓRIA BIZARRA DO MANGÁ PREFERIDO DOS EXTREMISTAS! Como Ashita no Joe mudou o Japão?

🔥Visit https://surfshark.com/sarjeta and use the coupon SARJETA in your cart to guarantee 4 extra months of Surfshark VPN In this video, I discuss Ashita no Joe, a manga created by Asao Takamori and Tetsuya Chiba, published between 1968 and 1973 and adapted into an anime starting in 1970. It follows the journey of delinquent Joe Yabuki, a young man from the marginalized classes of Tokyo who finds in boxing a path of personal affirmation, rivalry, and self-destruction. The work became a landmark of Japanese culture for combining social drama, criticism of exclusion, and an intense ideal of overcoming adversity, decisively influencing the structure of the modern battle shōnen seen in Dragon Ball, Naruto, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, Hunter × Hunter, One Piece, Demon Slayer, Jujutsu Kaisen, and Chainsaw Man, especially through the formula of the rebellious protagonist, charismatic rivals, training, and fights laden with existential meaning. His success coincided with the peak of Japanese student mobilizations in the late 1960s, when groups like Zengakuren and Zenkyōtō occupied universities and challenged the state, making Joe an ambiguous symbol of revolt and nonconformity; at the same time, the writer Yukio Mishima admired the work for seeing in it an ethic of sacrifice, discipline, and vital intensity, which helps explain why Ashita no Joe remains rare in Japanese culture: a classic revered both by sectors of the radical left, who see in Joe an outcast fighting against the social order, and by sectors of the nationalist right, who value his stoicism, his courage, and his willingness to take his ideals to their ultimate consequences. Edited by: Juan Pablo Thumbnail: Luís Felipe Cabral 🛒 Amazon Link: https://amzn.to/4ajkfCL 💸 Pix for donations: [email protected] 💬 SUPPORT US on Catarse: https://www.catarse.me/quadrinhosnasa... Instagram:   / qnsarjeta   TikTok:   / qnsarjeta   Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/qnsarjeta.bs... My academic productions on comics: https://unisul.academia.edu/Alexandre... #anime #history #politics