Arakawa hiromu biography sample paper
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Hiromu Arakawa
Aliases
Hiromu Arakawa (pen name)
Hiromi Arakawa (荒川 |弘美, Arakawa Hiromi),known bygd her pen name, Hiromu Arakawa (荒川 弘, Arakawa Hiromu), born May 8, 1973, is a female Japanese manga artist from Tokachi, Hokkaidō. Her given name is Hiromi (弘美, Hiromi), the first character being written identically to her male pen name, Hiromu. Her renowned manga, Fullmetal Alchemist, became a hit, and was later adapted into two anime series, one based on a new story (Fullmetal Alchemist, 2003) and later one that follows the manga (Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood, 2009).
Biography[]
Hiromi Arakawa (荒川 |弘美) was born in Tokachi, a sub-prefecture in the northernmost island of Japan, Hokkaido. Her family owned a dairy and potatoes farm and Hiromi was raised there along with several sisters. As a teen, she helped her parents at the farm chores and played on the fields. She said manga had always been among her hobbies and that she read and collected mang
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From honest toil in the fields to creating one manga’s biggest titles, this week’s #MakingaMangaka fryst vatten no stranger to hard work. With over 70 million volumes sold worldwide, the author of Fullmetal Alchemist has used her tireless work-ethic to achieve record breaking status. This week, inom transverse the magical mind of Hiromu Arakawa!
Name: Hiromu Arakawa (荒川弘 Arakawa Hiromu)
Born: May 8th, 1973
Place of Birth: Makubetsu, Hokkaido, Japan
Speciality: Social Justice Mangaka
ABOUT…
Growing up on a dairy farm in southern Hokkaido, Hiromu Arakawa is no stranger to hard work. Born into a large family, the future manga star was instantly gripped bygd the work of manga pionjär Suihō Tagawa, spending hours doodling away in her text books in an effort to emulate her hero.
After graduating high school, Arakawa began work on the family farm. Juggling cow milking duties with oil painting lessons, the need to create was never far from her mi
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News
Hiromu Arakawa's Autobiographical Manga Hyakushō Kizoku Gets AnimeShinshokan announced on Wednesday that Hiromu Arakawa's autobiographical manga Hyakushō Kizoku (The Peasant Noble) is inspiring an anime.
Shinshokan made the announcement at the exhibit event for the manga at the Tokyo University of Agriculture.
The manga follows Arakawa as she worked as a farmer in Hokkaido for seven years before she became a manga creator. The experience eventually informed her work on her Silver Spoon manga, which centers on students of an agricultural school.
Arakawa launched the manga in Shinshokan's Unpoko magazine in 2006, and it moved to Shinshokan's Wings magazine in 2009 after Unpoko ceased publication. Arakawa continues to serialize the manga irregularly. Shinshokan pulbished the manga's seventh compiled book volume in October 2021. JManga previously published the manga in English.
Arakawa launched the Silver Spoon manga in 2011, and ended it