JoJo's Bizarre Adventure

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Jojo's Bizarre Adventure (Classic English Logo Vector).pngFile:Jojo's bizarre adventure hi res japanese logo.png

JoJo's Bizarre Adventure (ジョジョの奇妙な冒険, JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken) (often shortened to JoJo or abbreviated JJBA) is a shōnen and seinen manga written and illustrated by Hirohiko Araki, and the main subject of this wikia project.

Profile

JoJo was serialized in Weekly Shonen Jump from 1987 to 2004, when it transferred to monthly seinen magazine Ultra Jump, where the story continues.

The series has sold over 80 million volumes in Japan,[1] and is one of the overall best-selling Weekly Shonen Jump series.[2] Filling over 100 volumes (for a total of ~20,000 pages), it is Shueisha's second longest-running manga series. Publication in English of the earlier parts of the series is ongoing.

JoJo's genre spans Action, Adventure, Supernatural, Thriller/Suspense, Comedy, Mystery, and Horror. It is perhaps most popularly known for its Stand phenomenon; the Stardust Crusaders arc and its characters Dio and Jotaro Kujo; the expressive rendition of its proud, glamorous personalities; and its hundreds of nominal references to Western popular music.

Adding to the JoJo canon to varying degrees, Araki has authored several spin-offs and related artbooks; and several light novels have also been produced, all containing his illustrations.

JoJo is the longest Shueisha manga series not to have recieved an animated adaptation for television. However, the official TV anime finally made its debut on October 6, 2012 (separating the manga and anime debuts by twenty-five years); designed by animation studio David Production.

Its range of other merchandise includes several adaptations in video games, including two fighting games of international release; Heritage for the Future by Capcom (on the CPS-3 board), and All Star Battle by Bandai Namco Games for the PS3.

Guide

Summary

The story in JoJo is divided between two universes; the first detailed in Weekly Shonen Jump from 1987 to 2003, and the second primarily in seinen magazine Ultra Jump, from 2003/04 to the present.

The first begins with Part I: Phantom Blood; featuring the fraught and bloody relationship between usurper Dio Brando and hero Jonathan Joestar. Attrition between Jonathan's descendants (each identifiable as "JoJo") and their allies and Dio's followers characterizes a broad continuity to this series: In Part II, Jonathan's grandson Joseph combats the Pillar Men, creators of the Stone Mask which granted Dio his Vampiric powers; in Part III, Joseph's grandson Jotaro combats Dio's army of Stand users before Dio himself; in Part IV, Joseph's son Josuke faces a host of new Stand users in his community in Morioh, Japan; in Part V, Dio's son Giorno fights for his position atop the mafia hierarchy in Italy; and in Part VI, Jotaro's daughter Jolyne battles Enrico Pucci, Dio's acolyte.

The second universe begins with Part VII: Steel Ball Run; featuring many references to events in the former series. Set in 1890, SBR focuses on the fierce competition between dual protagonists Gyro Zeppeli and Johnny Joestar and various other agents for the acquisition of an invaluable, world-defining mystical object, under the cover of the epic American Steel Ball Run race. Leaping to the present day in Part VIII: JoJolion, secret implications to this history are investigated along with the mystery of the protagonist's ultimate identity and the paranormal circumstances surrounding his adoptive hometown.

Chapters and arcs in JoJo are diverse in tone, contributing to a span of genres including Action, Adventure, Comedy, Thriller, Mystery, Horror and Supernatural fiction. The thrust of the plot is met by precarious, melodramatic interactions between individuals defined by supernatural power and exclusive ambitions, attitudes or moral standards, along with a race among the emergent heroes of a given story to intercept a powerful central antagonist. The signature mechanic of the series is provided in the first two episodes by the Ripple, wielded in the trained human body and transferred in hand-to-hand combat; and the supernatural, increasingly abstract combative Stand power thereafter. Recurrent subjects in the text of the manga may be condensed under themes of Fate, Fortunity, Justice and Redemption. Hirohiko Araki, asked in 2006 to summarize the work a phrase, answered "the enigma of human beings" and "a eulogy [to] [the] human";[3] and on his attitude to manga, "the salvation of the heart".[4]

Many references to modern film, television, fashion, popular music and fine art are readily identifiable throughout JoJo in many settings and both the characterization and nomenclature of the cast. Examples of physical, mathematical and psychological theory, biology, technology, mythology, natural phenomena, historic events, and segments of other artistic work inform the design and functionality of JoJo 's multitude of unique Stands. The series occasionally makes fanciful developments upon contemporary scientific theory in creation of the routes by which certain Stands and other powers exert an influence on nature.

Morioh, fictional Japanese town and base of Part IV: Diamond is Unbreakable and as a distinct incarnation in the ongoing Part VIII: JoJolion shares its coordinates with Araki's hometown, Sendai,[5] assuming a more culturally detailed description and referencing more contemporary topics (such as the 2011 Tohoku earthquake) than other settings. Stand-wielding mangaka Rohan Kishibe, a resident of Morioh introduced in Diamond is Unbreakable, returns as guide in a number of JoJo spin-offs.

Parts

No. Title Original Run Volumes
1

Phantom Blood

1987 – 1988 5
Beginning in 1880, Part I follows Jonathan Joestar as he matures with and eventually combats his adoptive brother, the cunning, merciless Dio Brando.
No. Title Original Run Volumes
2

Battle Tendency

1988 – 1989 7

Set in 1938, Part II follows Joseph Joestar, grandson of Jonathan, as he masters the Ripple in order to combat hostile, ancient super-beings named the Pillar Men; creators of the Stone Mask.

No. Title Original Run Volumes
3

Stardust Crusaders

1989 – 1992 16

Part III follows Jotaro Kujo and his allies as they journey from Tokyo to Cairo to save his mother's life by defeating his family's resurrected archenemy, DIO.

No. Title Original Run Volumes
4

Diamond is Unbreakable

1992 – 1995 18

In Part IV, the Arrow, manifesting latent Stand abilities, travels throughout Morioh, Japan; as high schooler Josuke Higashikata (illegitimate son of Joseph) and friends seek out the culprits of a series of homicides.

No. Title Original Run Volumes
5

Vento Aureo

1995 – 1999 17

Part V follows Giorno Giovanna, the son of DIO, in his ambition to rise within the Italian mafia by subverting the dominant gang Passione.

No. Title Original Run Volumes
6

Stone Ocean

2000 – 2003 17

In Part VI, in a prison in Port St. Lucie, Florida, Jolyne Cujoh, daughter of Jotaro, struggles within a profound, longstanding plot agreed between dead villian DIO and ideologue Enrico Pucci.

No. Title Original Run Volumes
7

Steel Ball Run

2004 – 2011 24

Beginning another continuity; in the U.S. in 1890, Part VII follows Gyro Zeppeli, master in a mystic art named the Spin, and Johnny Joestar, a paraplegic ex-jockey, as they compete with a vast number of others in the highly rewarded Steel Ball Run race; designed in part by the American government.

No. Title Original Run Volumes
8

JoJolion

2011-Ongoing 10

In continuation, Part VIII begins in 2011 and follows Josuke Higashikata, a young man afflicted by retrograde amnesia, on his search to uncover his identity in Morioh, a coastal Japanese town affected by the Tohoku earthquake.

Publication

Chapters are serialized in Weekly Shōnen Jump and Ultra Jump, under Shueisha.

For Part III: Stardust Crusaders, there exists an English translation and publication in volumes by VIZ Media (Shueisha). Part I: Phantom Blood and Part II: Battle Tendency are also to be published by VIZ Media, from September 2014 for Part I, and March 2015 for Part II.

In Italy, the entire series is translated and published in volumes by Star Comics (Italy).[6]

In France, the first four parts were published by J'ai lu[7] and the rest is published by Tonkam[8] since 2007.

Trivia

References