Moto Hagio Explained

Native Name:萩尾望都
Native Name Lang:ja
Birth Date:12 May 1949
Birth Place:Ōmuta, Fukuoka, Japan
Occupation:Manga artist
Years Active:1969–present
Person of Cultural Merit
Signature:File:Moto Hagio signature.png

is a Japanese manga artist. Regarded for her contributions to shōjo manga (manga aimed at young and adolescent women), Hagio is considered the most significant artist in the demographic and among the most influential manga artists of all time, being referred to as the by critics.

Hagio made her debut as a manga artist in 1969 at the publishing company Kodansha before moving to Shogakukan in 1971, where she was able to publish her more radical and unconventional works that had been rejected by other publishers. Her first serializations at Shogakukan – the vampire fantasy The Poe Clan, the shōnen-ai (male–male romance) drama The Heart of Thomas, and the science fiction thriller They Were Eleven – were among the first works of shōjo manga to achieve mainstream critical and commercial success. Hagio subsequently emerged as a central figure in the Year 24 Group, a grouping of female manga artists who significantly influenced shōjo manga in the 1970s by introducing new aesthetic styles and expanding the category to incorporate new genres. Since the 1980s, Hagio has drawn primarily adult-oriented manga in the manga magazine Petit Flower and its successor publication Flowers, notably Marginal, A Cruel God Reigns, and Nanohana.

While Hagio primarily authors works in the science fiction, fantasy, and shōnen-ai genres, her manga explores a wide range of themes and subjects, including comedy, historical drama, and social and environmental issues. She has been recognized with numerous awards both in Japan and internationally, including the Order of the Rising Sun, a Medal of Honor, and commendation as a Person of Cultural Merit.

Biography

Early life and career

Moto Hagio was born on May 12, 1949, in Ōmuta, Fukuoka. The second of four siblings, Hagio's father worked as dockworker, while her mother was a homemaker. Because of her father's job, the Hagio family moved frequently between Omuta and Suita in Osaka Prefecture. Hagio began to draw at an early age in her spare time, and attended private art lessons with her older sister. In her third year of elementary school, she began reading manga that she acquired at kashi-hon (book rental stores) and her school library. Her parents discouraged her interest in illustration and manga, which Hagio states they viewed as "something for children not old enough to read" and "an impediment to studying"; this would be a major contributing factor to what would become a lifelong strained relationship with her parents.

During her childhood, Hagio read and became influenced by the works of manga artists Osamu Tezuka, Shōtarō Ishinomori, Hideko Mizuno, and Masako Watanabe, as well as literary fiction by Japanese authors such as Kenji Miyazawa and western science fiction and fantasy authors such as Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, and Robert A. Heinlein. She began to seriously consider a professional career in manga after reading Tezuka's manga series Shinsengumi in 1965, and in 1967 began submitting manga manuscripts to various publishers, including Kodansha, Shueisha, and Tezuka's own manga magazine COM.

In her senior year of high school Hagio met manga artist, who also lived in Ōmuta and was pursuing a professional career at Kodansha while still in high school. After graduating, Hirata moved to Tokyo and offered to introduce Hagio to her editor, which Hagio accepted. Hagio made her professional debut as a manga artist in Kodansha's Nakayoshi manga magazine, with the short stories Lulu to Mimi in August 1969 and Suteki na Mahō in September 1969. Hagio began working for Nakayoshi under a new editor, but struggled under the editorial constraints of the magazine: Nakayoshi published primarily sports manga for children, while Hagio preferred to write science fiction and fantasy stories focused on mature themes and subject material. Her next four manuscripts submitted to Nakayoshi were consequently rejected, with her editors instructing her to write stories that were "more interesting and cheerful". In 1970, Hagio published the one-shot (single-chapter) manga stories Cool Cat and Bakuhatsu Gaisha in Nakayoshi.

Breakthrough and the Year 24 Group

See main article: Year 24 Group.

Shortly after her debut, Hagio began pen pal correspondence with, a fan of Hagio's who discovered her work through Nakayoshi. Masuyama gifted Hagio a copy of the novel Demian by Hermann Hesse, an author whose novels came to greatly affect Hagio and significantly influenced her manga. Contemporaneously, Hagio's editor assigned her to assist manga artist Keiko Takemiya, whose work had been published in Nakayoshi, COM, and Margaret. The two artists became friends, and Takemiya suggested that they move to an apartment in Tokyo together; Hagio, who was still living with her parents in Ōmuta and unsure of her future as a manga artist, initially refused her invitation. Shortly thereafter, Takemiya introduced Hagio to, an editor at Shogakukan and editor-in-chief of the manga magazine Bessatsu Shōjo Comic. Yamamoto agreed to publish Hagio's previously rejected manuscripts, and Hagio accepted Takemiya's offer to move to Tokyo.

In 1971, Hagio and Takemiya moved to a rented house in Ōizumigakuenchō, Nerima, Tokyo located near the home of Norie Masuyama. Together, the three women decided to create a living space modeled off of 19th French literary salons, nicknamed the "Ōizumi Salon". The Ōizumi Salon aimed to improve the quality and reputation of shōjo manga, a demographic which at the time was dismissed by critics as publishing frivolous stories for young children. Numerous shōjo artists visited the Ōizumi Salon, including Shio Satō, Yasuko Sakata, Yukiko Kai, Akiko Hatsu, Nanae Sasaya,,,, and . This grouping of artists would come to be referred to as the Year 24 Group. The Year 24 Group contributed significantly to the development of shōjo manga by introducing new aesthetic styles and expanding the demographic to incorporate elements of science fiction, historical fiction, adventure fiction, and same-sex romance: both male–male (shōnen-ai and yaoi) and female–female (yuri). During this period, Hagio published the shōnen-ai one-shot The November Gymnasium in 1971, followed by the vampire fantasy The Poe Clan in 1972, with the latter series becoming Hagio's first major critical and commercial success. The Poe Clan was also the first series that Shogakukan published as a tankōbon (collected edition); the first tankōbon edition of The Poe Clan sold out its initial print run of 30,000 copies in three days, an unprecedented sales volume at the time for a shōjo manga series that had not been adapted into an anime.

Following a 1973 trip to Europe by Hagio, Masuyama, and Yamagishi, Takemiya announced that the Ōizumi Salon would cease, as she preferred to continue her career alone. Decades later, both Hagio and Takemiya would disclose that the pair had a falling out in 1973 that remains unreconciled; Takemiya has written in her memoirs about feelings of jealously and an inferiority complex towards Hagio, while Hagio has written that their relationship was strained by accusations from critics that she plagiarized her shōnen-ai works from Takemiya.[1] Nonetheless, the innovation introduced to shōjo manga by the Year 24 Group significantly contributed to the development of the demographic, bringing it to what critics have described as its "golden age".

Career as a manga artist

In the wake of the critical and commercial success of The Rose of Versailles by Year 24 Group member Riyoko Ikeda, Hagio's editor asked her to create a series of similar length and complexity for publication in the manga magazine Shūkan Shōjo Comic. The resulting series was The Heart of Thomas, a long-form serialized version of Hagio's earlier The November Gymnasium, which began serialization in the magazine in 1974. Though initially poorly received by readers, by the end of its serialization The Heart of Thomas was among the most popular series in Shūkan Shōjo Comic. The critical and commercial success of both The Poe Clan and The Heart of Thomas freed Hagio from most editorial constraints and allowed her to publish her previously rejected works of science fiction, a genre which at the time was perceived as inappropriate for female audiences and thus was effectively non-existent in shōjo manga.

They Were Eleven, Hagio's first published science fiction manga series, began serialization in Bessatsu Shōjo Comic in 1975. Hagio began to establish herself as a science fiction writer and moved away from the constraints of shōjo magazines, publishing a manga adaptation of science fiction writer Ryu Mitsuse's novel Hyakuoku no Hiru to Sen'oku no Yoru in the shōnen manga (boys' manga) magazine Weekly Shōnen Champion in 1977. This was followed by several manga adaptations of the works of Ray Bradbury published as the one-shot anthology U wa Uchuusen no U beginning in 1977, Gin no Sankaku in 1980, and various one-shots in the science-fiction focused S-F Magazine. Hagio did create science fiction works for shōjo magazines during this period, notably Star Red for Shūkan Shōjo Comic from 1978 to 1979.

In 1980 Yamamoto became the founding editor of Petit Flower, a new magazine at Shogakukan that published manga aimed at an adult female audience. Hagio moved to the magazine, where she was given full editorial control over the manga she produced. In the subsequent decades Hagio would publish many works in Petit Flower and its successor publication Flowers that are distinguished by their mature themes and subject material. Notable works include the crime thriller Mesh in 1980, the post-apocalyptic science fiction series Marginal from 1985 to 1987, the semi-autobiographical Iguana Girl in 1992, and A Cruel God Reigns from 1993 to 2001. Hagio's works during this period were generally not influenced by developments in contemporary shōjo manga, such as the erotic manga of artists like Kyoko Okazaki and the josei manga or artists like Erica Sakurazawa.

Hagio began teaching manga studies as a visiting professor at the Joshibi University of Art and Design in 2011.[2] That same year, the Fukushima nuclear disaster occurred; with the publication of her manga series Nanohana, Hagio became one of the first manga artists following Kotobuki Shiriagari to address the disaster directly in her work; Hagio's prominence as an artist is credited with influencing other manga artists to address the disaster in their works. To mark the fifteenth anniversary of Flowers in 2016, Hagio launched a revival of The Poe Clan in the magazine, publishing new chapters nearly forty years after the conclusion of the original series.[3]

Style and influences

When asked about her visual influences, Hagio responded that she was influenced by Shotaro Ishinomori's page layouts, Hideko Mizuno's clothing, and Masako Yashiro's eyes.

In the early 1970s, Hagio and her fellow Year 24 Group members contributed significantly to the establishment of shōjo manga as a distinct category of manga, iterating on contributions made to the category in the 1950s and 1960s by artists such as Macoto Takahashi to establish a "visual grammar of shōjo manga". Chief among these developments was the use of interior monologue, which was written outside of speech balloons and scattered across the page. These monologues allow the exploration of the characters' interiority and emotions, and serve to compensate for the absence of third-person narration in manga.

In Hagio's manga specifically, interior monologues are often accompanied by symbolic motifs that extend beyond panel borders and overlap in a manner resembling a montage or a collage, creating a three-dimensional effect. These motifs are often composed of decorative elements (flowers, clouds, screentones, etc.) but are also often lines, sparkles, and onomatopoeia which serve to reinforce the "exploration of the interiority" of the characters. Hagio also makes use of full-body portraits of main characters, a technique originated Macoto Takahashi, as well as superimposed close-ups of these characters, to mark the character as important in the narrative. Hagio also uses mise-en-scène and lighting marked a strong contrast of shadow and light, giving a theatrical effect to her works.

When Hagio began to create manga for an adult audience beginning with Mesh in 1980, she adopted a more realist style. In particular, she changed the body shape of her characters, who until then exhibited the typical shōjo style of heads that were proportionally larger than the rest of their bodies. She also gradually altered her page layouts, especially during the 2000s, to make her style more accessible to a new readership.

Themes and motifs

Hagio primarily authors works in the science fiction, fantasy, and boys' love genres, though her works explore a wide variety of themes and subjects. This is especially true of her short stories, which have depicted a variety of topics and genres including comedy, historical drama, and social and environmental issues. Though her works are primarily aimed at a female audience, she does also attract a male readership.

Dysfunctional families

Hagio has long had a difficult relationship with her parents, who disapproved of her career as a manga artist even after she achieved mainstream critical and commercial success; it was not until 2010, when Hagio was 61 years old, that her mother accepted her profession. This strained relationship, combined with Hagio's own interest in family psychology, has had a significant impact on her manga. Families and familial drama recur as common motifs in Hagio's manga, especially twins, which are inspired by Hagio's childhood fantasy of having a twin sister so that her mother would pay more attention to her, and mothers, who are typically portrayed as incapable of loving their children and frequently die.

Initially, Hagio approached manga as an opportunity to depict "something beautiful", rather than an "ugly" reality. Consequently, she avoided contemporary Japanese settings for her early works, instead preferring European or otherworldly sci-fi settings. These early works nevertheless address dysfunctional family relationships, such as her one-shot Bianca (1970), a "gothic revenge plot" by a child against their parents and older authority figures.[4] Her 1992 one-shot Iguana Girl became a turning point in both her life and career. In this semi-autobiographical story, a mother perceives her daughter as an iguana and rejects her; the daughter internalizes this rejection, and is in turn convinced that she is an iguana. Hagio has described the process of writing the story as a means of making peace with her family, and following its publication, she became more comfortable writing works set in contemporary Japan. Familial drama nevertheless remains a common theme in her works, as expressed in stories that address topics of child abandonment, incestual rape, and abortion.

Bishōnen and shōnen-ai

Hagio's works typically feature male rather than female protagonists, especially bishōnen ("beautiful boys", a term for handsome and androgynous young men). She has described a "sense of liberation" that comes from writing male characters, as they allow her to express thoughts and concepts freely, in contrast to female protagonists who face the restrictions of a patriarchal society. Hagio first introduced bishōnen protagonists to her works with The November Gymnasium in 1971. The series is set in an all-boys boarding school, though an early draft of the story had a girls boarding school as its setting in order to conform to the conventions of the shōjo manga of the time, resulting in a story of the Class S genre. Dissatisfied with the draft, Hagio changed the protagonists to bishōnen; this aligned the story with the then-nascent genre of shōnen-ai, the precursor to modern boys' love (male–male romance manga).

The bishōnen of Hagio's works are both non-sexual and androgynous: socially masculine, physically androgynous, and psychologically feminine. The meaning of gender ambiguity has been variously considered by critics: from a queer perspective by manga scholar James Welker as an expression of sublimated lesbian identity, and from a feminist perspective by sociologist Chizuko Ueno it as an attempt to break out of the patriarchal dichotomy by creating a "third sex".

Feminist science fiction

Hagio's science fiction works depict themes and subjects typical of the genre, such as human cloning and time travel, but also take advantage of the genre's ability to depict worlds in which gender-based differences and power imbalances differ from that of the real word. Hagio's science fiction manga frequently explores topics relating to the place women in society, motherhood, and gender fluidity, taking particular inspiration from the works of Ursula K. Le Guin.

Notable examples include They Were Eleven, which depicts characters who belong to a race where individuals are asexual at birth and whose sex is determined at adulthood; Star Red, which depicts a protagonist who is birthed by a male character, and Marginal, which is set in a society that has become majority male through the use of sexual biological engineering. This feminist science fiction, where characters that blur distinctions of sex and gender, challenges notions of dualism and sexual dimorphism and has been argued by sociologist Chizuko Ueno as representing an evolution of the feminist use of the boys' love genre to explore these themes. It has also inspired the works of other shōjo science fiction manga artists, such as Reiko Shimizu and Saki Hiwatari.

Works

Manga

The following is a list of Hagio's serialized and one-shot manga works. Serializations refer to multi-chapter works that are typically later published as collected editions (tankōbon), while one-shots refer to single-chapter works that are sometimes later collected in anthologies. Titles for works that have not received an official English-language translation or do not have an English title are listed using Hepburn romanization. All dates and publishers are sourced from The 50th Anniversary of The Poe Clan and the World of Moto Hagio unless otherwise noted.

Serials

StartEndEnglish/Hepburn titleOriginal titlePublisher
19711974Shogakukan
1972presentShogakukan
19721976Shogakukan
19741974Shogakukan
19751975Shogakukan
19751975Hakusensha
19751975They Were ElevenShogakukan
19751976Shueisha
19761976Akita Shoten
19761976Akita Shoten
19771977Akita Shoten
19771978Shueisha
19771978Shogakukan
19781979Star RedShogakukan
19791979Les Enfants TerriblesShogakukan
19801983Shogakukan
19801982Gin no SankakuHayakawa
19811984A, A PrimeAkita Shoten, Shogakukan
19821982Akita Shoten
19851985Shogakukan
19851987MarginalShogakukan
19881988Shogakukan
19881989Shogakukan
19881991Kadokawa Shoten
19801990Shogakukan
19911992Shogakukan
19922001A Cruel God ReignsShogakukan
19921994Kadokawa Shoten
20022005Otherworld BarbaraShogakukan
20062007Abunazaka HotelShueisha
20062012Shogakukan
20082012Lil' LeoShogakukan
20092010Hishikawa-san to NekoKodansha
20112012NanohanaShogakukan
20132020Shueisha
20132015AwayShogakukan

One-shots

YearEnglish/Hepburn titleJapanese titlePublished in
1969Lulu to MimiNakayoshi
Suteki na MahōNakayoshi
1970Kūru KyattoNakayoshi
Bakuhatsu GaishaNakayoshi
BiancaShōjo Friend
Kēki Kēki KēkiNakayoshi
1971Girl on Porch with PuppyCOM
Belle to Mike no OhanashiShōjo Comic
Yuki no KoShōjo Comic
Tō no Aru IeShōjo Comic
Jenifer no Koi no Oaite WaNakayoshi
Hanayome o Hirotta OtokoShōjo Comic
Katappo no Furu GutsuNakayoshi
Kawaisō na MamaShōjo Comic
Seirei-gariShōjo Comic
MōdorinShōjo Comic
Sayo no nū YukataShōjo Comic
Kenneth Ojisan to FutagoShōjo Comic
Mō Hitotsu no KoiShōjo Comic
Jū-gatsu no Shōjo-tachiCOM
Autumn JourneyShōjo Comic
Shōjo Comic
Shiroki Mori Shiroi Shōnen no FueShōjo Comic
Shiroi Tori ni Natta ShōjoShōjo Comic
Sara-hill no SeiyaShōjo Comic
1972Asobi-damaShōjo Comic
Keito-dama ni JarenaideShōjo Comic
Mitsukuni no MusumeShōjo Comic
Gomen Asobase!Shōjo Comic
San-gatsu Usagi ga Shūdan DeShōjo Comic
Yōsei no KomoriShōjo Comic
Roku-gatsu no KoeShōjo Comic
Mamarēdo-chanShōjo Comic
MiaShōjo Comic
1973Senbon-me no PinShōjo Comic
Kyabetsu-batake no Isan SōzokuninShōjo Comic
Ō mai Keseira SeraShōjo Comic
1974Hawādo-san no Shinbun KōkokuShōjo Comic
Unicorn no YumeShōjo Comic
Manga ABCShōjo Comic
Pushikyatto PushikyattoShōjo Comic
1975OnshitsuSeventeen
Supēsu SutorītoShōjo Comic
ViolitaJotomo
1976Hana to Hikari no NakaShōjo Comic
By the LakeStrawberry Fields
1977OnshitsuBig Comic Original
Marié, Ten Years LaterBig Comic Original
MarineSeventeen
1978Gōruden RairakkuShōjo Comic
Hidarikiki no IzanSF Fantasia
1979Hanabana ni Sumu KodomoPrincess
ChrysalisSeven Comic
1980GesshokuVampirella
RāginīS-F Magazine
Petit Flower
A Drunken DreamKingin Sagan
Kin'yō no Yoru no ShūkaiS-F Magazine
1983 ShiroPetit Flower
4/4 (Quatre-Quarts)Petit Flower
1984Petit Flower
Egg StandPetit Flower
Nise ōPetit Flower
Herbal BeautyBouquet
Tenshi no GitaiPetit Flower
FunePetit Flower
1985Slow DownPetit Flower
Bara no KabinPetit Flower
Yūjin KGrapefruit
Kimi wa Utsukushii HitomiAsuka
1989Kaizoku to HimegimiPetit Flower
Aoi ToriPetit Flower
1990Manatsu no yo no Wakusei (Planet)Petit Flower
1991RotbarthPetit Flower
Juliette no KoibitoPetit Flower
CatharsisPetit Flower
1992Iguana GirlPetit Flower
1994Gogo no HizashiBig Gold
Gakkō e Iku KusuriBig Gold
1998Child Igyō Collection 7
2006Nagagutsu o Haita Shima NekoNeko Moto
2007Birthday CakeSF Japan
Flowers
2008Nekomoto ClinicNeko Moto 2
2016Through Yura's GateMonthly Afternoon
2018Basutei NiteMorning
2020Galileo no UchūApp Store[5]
2021Kirin KariDaijiro Morohoshi 50th Anniversary Tribute[6]

English-translated works

Essays & memoirs

Other

Reception

Influence

Hagio is regarded by critics as the most influential shōjo manga artist of all time and among the most influential manga artists in the entirety of the medium, and is referred to as the by the Japanese press and critics, as styled off of Osamu Tezuka's sobriquet "the god of manga".[9] [10] She, along with the other artists associated with the Year 24 Group, is credited with "revolutionizing" shōjo manga and bringing it into its "golden age", making shōjo manga central to manga production in the 1980s and attracting a male readership to the category for the first time. Hagio and Keiko Takemiya originated the shōnen-ai genre, which was developed throughout the 1980s and 1990s to become yaoi, a major genre of manga. She is further credited with establishing science fiction as a subgenre of shōjo manga, though Hagio's impact on science fiction extends beyond manga to literature through her illustrations of science fiction and fantasy novels, with science fiction novelists such as Azusa Noa and Baku Yumemakura citing Hagio as among their influences.

Awards and nominations

Award YearCategory Recipient(s)Result
2016Asahi Prize [11]
Angoulême International Comics Festival Awards2023Fauve d'honneur[12]
Eisner Award2011Best U.S. Edition of International Material—AsiaA Drunken Dream and Other Stories[13]
2014The Heart of Thomas[14]
2018Otherworld Barbara[15]
2020The Poe Clan[16]
2022Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame[17]
Harvey Awards2020Best MangaThe Poe Clan[18]
Inkpot Award2010Inkpot Award[19]
Iwate Manga Awards2018Special Award Nanohana[20]
Japan Cartoonists Association Award2011Minister of Education, Science and Technology Award[21]
2012Purple Ribbon[22]
Nihon SF Taisho Award2006Grand PrizeOtherworld Barbara[23]
Order of the Rising Sun20223rd Class, Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon[24]
Person of Cultural Merit2019Person of Cultural Merit [25]
Seiun Award1980Best ComicStar Red[26]
1983Gin no Sankaku
1985X + Y
Sense of Gender Award2012Lifetime Achievement AwardNanohana[27]
Shogakukan Manga Award1975Shōnen (Boys' Manga)They Were Eleven and The Poe Clan[28]
Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize1997Award for ExcellenceA Cruel God Reigns[29]

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Morrissy . Kim . Moto Hagio Publishes Memoir Addressing Her Feud With Keiko Takemiya . . February 3, 2022 . May 18, 2021.
  2. Web site: 萩尾望都、女子美術大学の客員教授に就任 . . August 14, 2022 . Japanese . June 2, 2011.
  3. Web site: 萩尾望都「ポーの一族」新作が40年ぶりに登場!flowersに掲載 . Comic Natalie . August 14, 2022 . Japanese . April 28, 2016.
  4. Parille . Ken . Moto Hagio's Bianca: Against Culture . . March 9, 2011 . Fantagraphics Books.
  5. Web site: アップル、萩尾望都のiPad描き下ろし漫画『ガリレオの宇宙』を無料公開。App Storeで創作を語るインタビューも . Engadget . December 2, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200806225131/https://japanese.engadget.com/hagio-moto-app-store-apple-today-manga-galileo-221222047.html . August 6, 2020 . Japanese . August 6, 2020.
  6. Web site: 浦沢直樹、萩尾望都、星野之宣、山岸凉子らが描き下ろし「諸星大二郎トリビュート」 . Comic Natalie . December 2, 2022 . September 7, 2021.
  7. Web site: 時空の旅人 -Time Stranger . ja . . August 12, 2022.
  8. . . . 1993 . .
  9. Web site: 「少女漫画の神様」萩尾望都 異端者寄り添った50年 . . August 14, 2022 . Japanese . October 1, 2019.
  10. Web site: 手塚治虫 人間の本音を描く 萩尾望都 100周年記念企画「100年の100人」 . . August 14, 2022 . Japanese . December 27, 2021.
  11. Web site: Hodgkins . Crystalyn . Heart of Thomas Manga Creator Moto Hagio Wins Asahi Prize . . March 12, 2021 . January 2, 2017.
  12. Web site: 萩尾望都がアングレーム国際漫画祭で特別栄誉賞「漫画に出会うことで私の人生は豊かに」 . Comic Natalie . January 29, 2024 . January 29, 2024.
  13. News: Cavna . Michael . 2011 EISNER AWARDS: Comic-Con announces the nominees... . . August 11, 2022 . April 7, 2011.
  14. Web site: Wheeler . Andrew . 2014 Eisner Awards: Full List Of Winners And Nominees . . August 11, 2022 . July 26, 2014.
  15. Web site: Ridgeley . Charlie . Complete List of 2018 Eisner Award Nominees Announced . . August 11, 2022 . April 26, 2018.
  16. Web site: McMillan . Graeme . 2020 Eisner Nominees: The Complete List . . August 11, 2022 . June 4, 2020.
  17. Web site: Hodgkins . Crystalyn . Moto Hagio Inducted into Eisner Hall of Fame . . July 24, 2022 . July 23, 2022.
  18. Web site: Mateo . Alex . Harvey Awards Nominates The Poe Clan, The Way of the Househusband, Witch Hat Atelier for Best Manga . . January 3, 2022 . August 31, 2020.
  19. Web site: Loo . Egan . Moto Hagio Receives Inkpot Award from Comic-Con Int'l . July 23, 2010 . . July 23, 2010.
  20. Web site: いわてマンガ大賞・マンガ郷いわて表彰式 特別賞受賞 萩尾さん 知事と記念トーク . Iwanichi OnLine . January 2, 2021 . December 21, 2018.
  21. Web site: Hodgkins . Crystalyn . May 10, 2011 . 40th Japan Cartoonist Awards Honor Moto Hagio. . September 27, 2019.
  22. Multiple Languages:
  23. Web site: Nihon SF Taisho Award Winners List . Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of Japan . August 5, 2010 . August 7, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110807030034/http://www.sfwj.or.jp/list.html . dead .
  24. Web site: Mateo . Alex . Manga Creator Moto Hagio Inducted Into Order of the Rising Sun . . November 11, 2022 . November 11, 2022.
  25. Web site: Kim . Allen . Mario Bros. creator Shigeru Miyamoto to be given one of Japan's highest honors. CNN. October 29, 2019. October 30, 2019.
  26. Web site: http://www.sf-fan.gr.jp/awards/list.html . ja:日本SFファングループ連合会議:星雲賞リスト . ja . December 31, 2007.
  27. Web site: 2012年度 第12回Sense of Gender賞 生涯功労賞 . . January 2, 2021 . Japanese.
  28. Web site: http://comics.shogakukan.co.jp/mangasho/rist.html . ja:小学館漫画賞:歴代受賞者 . Shogakukan . ja . August 19, 2007 . August 5, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150805112042/http://comics.shogakukan.co.jp/mangasho/rist.html . dead .
  29. Web site: Manga Award for Excellence: Hagio Moto Zankoku na kami ga shihai suru Exhibition . June 10, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080425084217/http://en.tezuka.co.jp/tomm/contents/project_ex/no12/cat03.html . April 25, 2008 . dead .