Manga cafe: Difference between revisions
UsagiEriko (talk | contribs) |
UsagiEriko (talk | contribs) m →In fiction: Put One Pound Gospel in Italics |
||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
*In the sixth episode of the 2006 [[anime]] ''[[Kanon]]'', the character Makoto Sawatari tries to get a job at a manga cafe. |
*In the sixth episode of the 2006 [[anime]] ''[[Kanon]]'', the character Makoto Sawatari tries to get a job at a manga cafe. |
||
*Misaki Nakahara of the series ''[[Welcome to the N.H.K.]]'' works in a manga cafe that her uncle owns. |
*Misaki Nakahara of the series ''[[Welcome to the N.H.K.]]'' works in a manga cafe that her uncle owns. |
||
* In the last episode of the live action [[One Pound Gospel]] Sister Angela is tricked into reading 30 novels at a manga cafe by Ueda-san. |
* In the last episode of the live action ''[[One Pound Gospel]]'' Sister Angela is tricked into reading 30 novels at a manga cafe by Ueda-san. |
||
*In one chapter of Kodomo No Jikan, Rin goes to a Manga Cafe, only to go on the computers and look at the "Adult" images. |
*In one chapter of Kodomo No Jikan, Rin goes to a Manga Cafe, only to go on the computers and look at the "Adult" images. |
||
*In the fourth episode of the Japanese television show, ''[[Sexy Voice and Robo]]'', many scenes take place in a manga cafe. |
*In the fourth episode of the Japanese television show, ''[[Sexy Voice and Robo]]'', many scenes take place in a manga cafe. |
Revision as of 12:17, 11 August 2009
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2009) |
A manga café (漫画喫茶, マンガ喫茶, mangakissa, "kissa" being short for "kissaten" which means café or cafeteria) is a kind of café in Japan where people can read manga. People pay for the time they stay in the café. Most manga cafés also offer internet access like internet cafés (ネットカフェ, netto kafe) and vice versa, making the two terms mostly interchangeable in Japan. Additional services include video games, television, snack/beverage vending machine, and more. Like Japanese cafés in general, smoking is usually permitted.
For an hour stay, the cost is generally about 400 yen, with most places requiring customers to pay this as a minimum even if leaving earlier. Some manga cafés offer a service where one can rest for the night.
Services
Search criteria at a search engine site ("National Net Café / Mangakisa Search Engine (beta)"[1]) offers a glimpse of services that may be offered at a mangakisa:
- Seating - reading seat, non-smoking seat, sofa, massage chair, party room, internet seat, pair seat, zashiki (tatami matted), reclining seat
- PC - disc burners, office software, color printers, photocopier, TV
- Facilities - movies/DVDs, shower room, darts, magazines, PC class, music CDs, nail salon, pool table, newspapers, CATV/CS broadcast, table tennis, slot machine, tanning bed, mahjong
Criticisms
Recently, there have been complaints from manga publishing/distribution companies that say manga cafés are unfair. Generally royalties are not paid for the reading of a book, and due to the nature of the business a single manga or graphic novel can be read by as many as 100 people. The profits go directly to the proprietors of the cafe rather than the manga distributors themselves. (Public libraries avoid this criticism because they do not take profits.) Cafés such as GeraGera are competing with companies such as Kinko's for quick e-mail and internet service.
In fiction
- In the sixth episode of the 2006 anime Kanon, the character Makoto Sawatari tries to get a job at a manga cafe.
- Misaki Nakahara of the series Welcome to the N.H.K. works in a manga cafe that her uncle owns.
- In the last episode of the live action One Pound Gospel Sister Angela is tricked into reading 30 novels at a manga cafe by Ueda-san.
- In one chapter of Kodomo No Jikan, Rin goes to a Manga Cafe, only to go on the computers and look at the "Adult" images.
- In the fourth episode of the Japanese television show, Sexy Voice and Robo, many scenes take place in a manga cafe.
See also
References
- Macias, Patick and Machiyama, Tomohiro. Cruising the Anime City: An Otaku Guide to Neo-Tokyo, Stone Bridge Press, 2004. ISBN 1-880656-88-4
External links