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User:1TWO3Writer/Rikao Yanagita

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Rikao Yanagita
柳田 理科雄
BornRikao Yanagita
(1961-06-21) June 21, 1961 (age 62)
Minamitane, Kumage, Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan
OccupationAuthor, mangaka, radio personality, lecturer
LanguageJapanese
NationalityJapanese
Alma materTokyo University
Period1996 -
GenreScience fiction, science studies
Notable worksKūsō Kagaku Dokuhon series
PartnerKondou Takashi
Website
Kusokagaku.co.jp

Rikao Yanagita (柳田 理科雄, Yanagita Rikao, born June 21, 1961) is a Japanese writer, manga author, radio personality, and adjunct lecturer at the Faculty of Science and Engineering, Meiji University. He is also a senior researcher at the Institute of Fantastic Science Inc. He is most known for the Kūsō Kagaku Dokuhon series.

Biography[edit]

Yanagita was born in Minamitane, Kumage, Kagoshima Prefecture. His father is Haseo Yanagita, who served as mayor of Minamitane until 2007. Two months before he was born, Yuri Gagarin was the first person to successfully achieve spaceflight. His father thereby named his son Rikao, rika being Japanese for science, believing that the era of science was upon them.[1] When registering his son's name, the town clerk had thought there was a mistake due to how unusual the name was. Yanagita's grandfather even complained that he should give his son a more "human name." However, Yanagita himself says that this unusual name has made it easier for others to remember him and helped him gain a wider circle of friends.

From a young age, Yanagita wanted to be a scientist, but also had a deep love for science fiction shows such as Ultraman and Kamen Rider. After attending the Kagoshima City Jо̄sei Junior High School and Kagoshima Prefectural Tsurumaru High School, he took the entrance exam for the Faculty of Science at Kyoto University, but failed the exam. After waiting a year for another chance to enter university, Yanagita entered University of Tokyo as a first year.

Originally, he intended to major in astrophysics due to his strong interest in space, but contrary to his expectations, he grew to dislike the curriculum and how it did not allow him to freely study what he found interest in, so he stopped showing up for class. He had started working part-time as a tutor at a cram school while he was still in school and became fascinated by the job, so he decided to become a tutor in earnest and dropped out of university. After working at several cram schools and studying for a year in the People's Republic of China, he opened his own private cram school, "Tenka Muteki Juku" in 1991, but as he said, "I had no talent as a manager," and the school quickly fell into financial difficulties.

Under such circumstances, in order to raise funds to rebuild the cram school's business, at the suggestion of Takashi Kondo, a friend from his junior high school days who was working as an editor at Takarajima at the time, he published "Kukan Kagaku Yomihon" (Imaginary Science Reader) in 1996, a scientific study of depictions in science fiction anime and special effects programs, in the form of a book based on the discussions he had in junior high school. The book was originally planned to have a circulation of 10,000 copies, but eventually became a bestseller with over 600,000 copies sold. However, the cram school that Yanagita was running went bankrupt before the royalties from "The Fantastic Science Reader" were deposited. After that, he continued to write the sequel to "The Fantastic Science Reader" while working as an instructor at a cram school run by a friend from his high school days, and became a full-time writer in 2000. At the same time, in 1999, he and Takashi Kondo jointly established a limited company, the "Imaginary Science Research Institute" (which became a joint-stock company in July 2016), with Yanagita himself calling himself the chief researcher of the institute (Kondo is the director).

In addition to writing, he also teaches part-time at Meiji University, which he describes in his book as a rather challenging job, given his past history of dropping out of college. In his lectures, he discusses topics such as the calculation of the energy generated during a collision between Ultraman and a monster in a fight scene.

According to him, the total amount of money he has spent on alcohol up to the 1990s is over 10 million yen. In "Fantastic Science Reader 2," he writes, "I like bourbon among whiskeys. If I had to pick a favorite sake in general, it would be the sweet potato shochu "Nansen" (Uezuma Shuzo). He is also an unparalleled fan of professional wrestling, to the extent that when he stayed in the People's Republic of China for a year from 1990 for business reasons, he was anxious to see what was going on in the Japanese professional wrestling world. In the "Fantastic Science Reader" series, Giant Baba frequently appears as a representative of a large and powerful person.

He is a keen observer of battle scenes and secret weapon settings in science fiction comics and special effects shows, but has a clear aversion to real war, as his own grandfather was killed in the Pacific War, and defines war as "the worst policy that an incompetent authority chooses, saying, 'This is the only way. It is the worst policy, and the people of the countries involved suffer a great deal of inconvenience regardless of whether they win or lose. As for the former French president Jacques Chirac, who conducted six nuclear tests by January 1996, he wrote in the "Imaginary Science Reader 2" published in 1997, "Don't aim for a 'strong France' now, you idiot, no matter how much you are a former de Gaulle! He also strongly criticized Chirac in the 1997 issue of "Imaginary Science Reader 2" with such expressions as "Don't aim for a 'strong France' now, fool!

As for professional baseball, he is a fan of the Saitama Seibu Lions. He has been a fan of the Saitama Seibu Lions since the days of their predecessor, the Nishitetsu Lions, as he says he is from Kyushu.

Since 2008, he has been posting commentary videos on YouTube called "KUSOLAB, the Imaginary Science Laboratory. In these videos, he is sometimes joined by Takashi Kondo, but Kondo only refers to himself as "Director" and never uses his real name.

Writing[edit]

Before Yanagita, there were many books that examined science fiction works from a scientific point of view, but the style of his books, mainly for children, was to develop his own hypotheses and draw funny conclusions by mixing scientific research with the descriptions in the plays (often focusing only on the descriptions and not on the settings of the works). The latest volume of "Kousou Kagaku Yomihon", "Kousou Kagaku Yomihon 17", was released in March 2016. The most recent paperback edition was published in July 2018, and is called "The Fantastic Science Reader: A Spell of Perdition That Will Destroy You! (Based on manuscripts that have appeared not only in "Kukan Kagaku Yomihon" but also in related books, with significant revisions and new writing added)[9].

In addition, as part of the Kūsō Kagaku series, he has published Kūsō Kagaku Manga Dokuhon, which analyzes manga under a scientific lens, Kūsō Kagaku Eiga Dokuhon, which examines the depiction of live-action movies, mainly science fiction, and Kūsō Kagaku Nihon Mukashibanashi Dokuhon, which analyzes classic Japanese folktales. He also has a dedicated series analyzing Pokémon called Pokemon Kūsō Kagaku. The Jyunia Kūsō Kagaku series for children surpassed a cumulative total of 1 million copies in the summer of 2018[2], and the Pokemon Kūsō Kagaku series has published a cumulative total of 150,000 copies as of 2017.[3] The entire Kūsō Kagaku series is estimated to have sold over 5 million copies as of 2018.[3]

In addition, Yanagita is the author of several original manga and novels, scientific examination being a major theme within his works.

Criticism[edit]

Hiroshi Yamamoto, a science fiction author himself, and others have pointed out that Yanagita's works contain errors, such as a failure to recognize the setting of a particular work (a lack of research in regards to the official setting of the works he criticizes, making up his own setting to justify his own observations, etc.) to the application of physical laws (how rocket propulsion actually works, confusing photon-force rockets with photon rockets in regards to rocket punch, a type of weaponary found within Go Nagai's Mazinger Z). Hiroshi Yamamoto detailed his criticism in his book Konnani Hendazo! Kūsō Kagaku Dokuhon.[4]

Yanagita, in response to these criticisms, has rereleased books with reworked content, usually with an afterword or with annotations apologizing for the mistakes present within the previous edition of said work.[5]

Bibliography[edit]

  • 空想科学読本』1 - 17 宝島社、1996-97 メディアファクトリー、1999-2016
    • 『空想科学読本6.5』2008 
    • 『空想科学読本Q』2010 
    • 『金の空想科学読本』2011(1~9までの読者が選んだ人気原稿25本を収録したBEST版)
    • 『銀の空想科学読本』2011(1~10までの筆者が選んだ26本を収録したBEST版)
    • 『空想科学読本ミドリ』2011(空想科学の疑問の中でも「緑」をテーマに置いたスペシャル版)
    • 『空想科学読本 3分間で地球を守れ!?』KADOKAWA(角川文庫)、2017
    • 『空想科学読本 正義のパンチは光の速さ!?』KADOKAWA(角川文庫)、2017
    • 『空想科学読本 滅びの呪文で、自分が滅びる!』KADOKAWA(角川文庫)、2018
  • 『空想非科学大全』メディアワークス、1998 
  • 『空想科学論争!』(円道祥之および木原浩勝との対談)扶桑社、1999 
  • 『空想科学「映画」読本』 1 - 2 扶桑社、2000-04 
  • 『空想科学「漫画」読本』 1 - 4 日本文芸社、2000-05  
  • 『空想科学少女リカ』(岡崎弘明との共著)日本文芸社、2004 
  • 『ゴジラVS柳田理科雄』メディアファクトリー、2004 
  • 『空想科学「日本昔話」読本』扶桑社、2006 
  • 『なぜ僕は理科を好きになったのだろう?』集英社インターナショナル、2006
  • 『ナレッジエンタ読本1 恐竜大戦!』(荒木一成との対談)メディアファクトリー、2007 
  • 『空想科学「生活」読本』扶桑社、2007 
  • 『柳田理科雄のウナレンがゆく なぞなぞは心のラブレター』講談社、2007
  • 『ナレッジエンタ読本4 科学バカ人生!』メディアファクトリー、2008 
  • 『ナレッジエンタ読本9 空想科学入門!』福田沙紀共著、メディアファクトリー、2008(ラジオ番組『福田沙紀と柳田理科雄のラジオ空想科学研究所』を書籍用に再構築したもの)
  • 『ナレッジエンタ読本5 空想キッチン!』(ケンタロウとの対談)メディアファクトリー、2008 「空想お料理読本」文庫 
    • 『空想お料理読本2』メディアファクトリー、2011  
  • 『ナレッジエンタ読本20 史上最強のロボット!』(高橋智隆との対談)メディアファクトリー、2009 
  • 『理科雄は本名です』メディアファクトリー、空想科学文庫、2010 
  • 『イナズマイレブン科学研究所』エンターブレイン、2011 ファミ通BOOKS
  • 『戦国BASARA科学研究所』エンターブレイン、2013 ファミ通BOOKS
  • 『ラジオ空想科学研究所』第1夜-2 武井咲共著 メディアファクトリー、2011-12 空想科学文庫
  • 『空想科学のツイッター』メディアファクトリー、2013
  • ジュニア空想科学読本』1 - 17 KADOKAWA(角川つばさ文庫)、2013 - 2019
  • 『空想科学「理科」読本』大和書房、2015
  • 『ポケモン空想科学読本』1 - 3 オーバーラップ、2016 - 2017
  • 『柳田理科雄の1日1科学』汐文社、春・夏・秋・冬 2015 - 2016
  • 『進撃の巨人 空想科学読本』講談社、2016
  • 『スター・ウォーズ空想科学読本』講談社(講談社文庫)、2017
  • 『MARVEL マーベル空想科学読本』講談社(講談社文庫)、2019
  • 『妖怪 空想科学読本』PHP研究所(PHPジュニアノベル)、2019
  • 『うんこドリル空想科学読本』文響社(うんこBooks)、2020
原作・監修
  • 『空想科学大戦!』1 - 4(漫画・筆吉純一郎)メディアファクトリー、1998 - 2000 ソニー・マガジンズ、2001
    • 『最後の空想科学大戦!』(『空想科学大戦!』1 - 4に続く5、漫画・筆吉純一郎)ジャイブ、2006
    • 『Dr.猫柳田の科学的青春』1 - 5(『空想科学大戦!』の番外編、漫画・筆吉純一郎)
  • 『空想法律読本』1 - 2(科学面の監修を担当)
  • 『俊平1/50』(山本貴嗣作。監修を担当)
  • 『空想科学エジソン』(カサハラテツロー作。初期の原作を担当)
  • 『空想科学学園』KADOKAWA(角川まんが学習シリーズ)(原作・監修を担当)
  • 『おとぎ話を科学する! コミック空想科学読本』1 - 2 KADOKAWA(角川まんが学習シリーズ)(原作・監修を担当)

Media Apperances[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Yanagita, Rikao; 柳田理科雄. (2010). Rikao wa honmyō desu : kūsō kagaku gaiden. Tōkyō: Mediafakutorī. ISBN 978-4-8401-3519-1. OCLC 659712854.
  2. ^ "『ジュニア空想科学読本』100万部突破記念!アニメやマンガで理科が好きになる!柳田理科雄SPトークライブ~空想科学をいっしょに楽しもう!". Peatix (in Japanese). Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  3. ^ a b "累計92万部『ジュニア空想科学読本』シリーズと『スター・ウォーズ』の、まさかのコラボ本". プレスリリース・ニュースリリース配信シェアNo.1|PR TIMES. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  4. ^ Yamamoto, Hiroshi; 山本弘. (2002). Konna ni hen dazo "kūsō kagaku dokuhon.". Tōkyō: Ōta Shuppan. ISBN 4-87233-659-3. OCLC 122804700.
  5. ^ Yanagita, Rikao; 柳田理科雄. (2014). Junia kūsō kagaku dokuhon : 3. Maru Fujishima, 藤嶋マル. Tōkyō: Kadokawa. ISBN 978-4-04-631469-7. OCLC 895570307.

External links[edit]

[[Category:Living people]] [[Category:1961 births]] [[Category:People from Kagoshima Prefecture]] [[Category:Japanese radio personalities]] [[Category:Manga writers]] [[Category:Pages with unreviewed translations]]