House of 1000 Manga
Attack on Titan
by Jason Thompson,

"I killed dangerous beasts! They only happened to resemble humans!"
Zombie stories work because, deep down, we know human beings are the scariest things on Earth. Sure, on a cosmic scale, the planet might be destroyed by solar flares or supernovas or Thousands of years in the future, most of the planet is infested with flesh-eating giants, and the last survivors of humanity live in fortified towns behind a ring of 50-meter-high walls. No one knows where the Titans came from; historical knowledge is suppressed, and a hierarchical military system keeps order within the massive walls. Only the Survey Corps, a special military division, regularly goes outside. As a boy, young Eren Yeager watches one expedition stagger back through the gates, half dead, half eaten, a group of 100 surveyors reduced to less than 20. Eren still thinks they're cool: "I have a dream! It's to leave this cramped walled-up world!" Eren's mother discourages his interest in the Survey Corps; like many people, she sees them as suicidally reckless, if not a waste of taxpayer money since most people have everything they need (at least, enough for a minimal subsistence existence) on the inside. Then one day everything falls apart into terror: a 60-meter-tall Titan, one of the anomalous "Abnormals," appears out of nowhere and smashes a hole in the wall. (Of course, OT, the Colossus Titan still isn't nearly as big as the giants in W.G. Marshall's science fiction novel The grim world of Attack on Titan has a retro feel, a bit like Fullmetal Alchemist. People ride horses (presumably fuel is rare), buildings and uniforms have an Old European late-1800s look, and the government is monarchical. Such technology as still exists is used mostly to fight Titans; the Titans regenerate quickly, cannons only slow them down, and the only way to kill them is to destroy a small area at the top of their spine. To combat them, elite soldiers wear "Vertical Maneuvering Equipment," basically a combination of grappling hooks and waist-strapped jetpacks which let them jump great distances. In short, you've got people swinging through the air like Spider-Man, swinging swords at the necks of gigantic monsters: isn't that much cooler than just shooting them with bigger and bigger guns? (They also use other clever anti-Titan methods, like making a "flesh wall" by pinning giants on metal hooks, until they're pinned together so densely other giants can't get through.) Unfortunately for humanity, there's a high attrition rate among Titan fighters. Titans grab them out of the air and squeeze out their guts. They are smashed against walls, stomped underfoot, and eaten. Fresh-faced young soldiers, who one moment are fraternizing and joking, in the next moment are screaming as they're torn apart. (OTOH, as a reader, I'm glad at least they die in battle; this isn't on one of those boring manga that spends thousands of pages on training sequences before we even see a Titan.) More disturbing than mere physical gore are scenes like the one when a soldier continues desperately trying to resuscitate her comrade with mouth-to-mouth even though his body is missing from the waist down; or the soldier surrounded by Titans who finds a gun, cheerfully says "All right!", and then uses it to blow his own brains out. This is war; some people go insane, some people die. Attack on Titan is a hit that lives up to the hype; I couldn't stop reading every volume once I started. Sure, freshman mangaka And mysteries; the other great thing is the mysteries. (SPOILERS from here on.) The world of Attack on Titan is a dystopia, filled with conspiracies and dark secrets and the strange science-fiction rationale behind the Titans. (Early on, we discover that the Titans don't actually need to eat people; they can live apparently immortally without food, and they periodically vomit up the corpses so there's room for more. Also, they have no genitals, so how do they reproduce?) Early on, the heroes discover a secret that changes everything: some human beings have the power to transform into Titans. Actually, it's not so much that they 'transform' as that they summon a Titan body around them, in which their human body remains embedded at the neck, like the pilots in mecha. (, their weak spot is their necks…?) Awakened to his Titan powers, Eren becomes a gigantic killing machine, barely in control of himself, able to rip enemy Titans apart with his bare hands. He's the military's greatest weapon, but with the discovery of his powers comes another terrifying realization: anyone could be a Titan. Soon, like the 2004 Battlestar Galactica only with "Who's a Titan?" instead of "Who's a Cylon?", our heroes realize that the greatest threat could walk among them. Could Titans actually have a form of intelligence and motivations beyond just eating people? Why would any human side with the Titans against the human race? What's more exciting: watching a bunch of people try to bring down a 50-foot giant, or watching two 50-foot giants beat the hell out of each other with trees, boulders, and piece of buildings? The secret of the Titans' origin may lie somewhere out in Titan-occupied territory, in a place from Eren's childhood…but perhaps the most monstrous secrets were waiting inside the wall all along… Like all popular things, Attack on Titan has been heavily criticized and analyzed, including now by myself. Some bloggers have asked, is Attack on Titan (and by extension all zombie stories) racist, since it's about hostile invaders who can't be reasoned with and can only be killed? I'd say no; as long as they're not identified with a specific real group, the idea of "innately evil people who only exist to kill and be killed" (zombies, alien invaders, etc.) isn't necessarily any more offensive than "innately ridiculous people who exist only to be laughed at" (comedy) or "innately horny people who exist only to have sex" (porn). None of these three things exist in real life, but in fiction they're useful. Isayama himself said the Titans were inspired by a frightening physical encounter with a belligerent drunk when he was working at an Internet café. As a metaphor, zombies can embody many different threats and fears: for example the fear of others, of having your comfortable walls and barriers torn down by invading hordes; or the fear of yourself, of isolation and stagnation, of finding out the corruption was inside you all along. Like many of the best zombie stories, Attack on Titan has both these elements, depicting a world where "Us vs. Them" is not clear-cut, where nowhere and no one is completely safe. (Interestingly, the Titans' designs are basically a case study in It's a harsh world, with no easy answers, and this is something you either love or hate about Attack on Titan. "I hate the human element in this manga, the heroes are so incompetent, they're the villains," one online commenter complained. "Translation: 'I don't like it when heroes aren't perfect and can't fight without killing a single person,'" another commenter shot back. "If you want a utopia where the good guys find the solution by being completely morally correct, then you should read some other manga." A recurring theme in Attack on Titan, as in most apocalyptic stories, is the struggle between pragmatism and idealism: what are you willing to do to survive? Is it morally right to let some people die so that others may live? Forget about killing a Titan, would you kill another human being? As the series goes on, the heroes must make difficult moral choices again and again. Eren, the closest thing to a standard idealistic shonen manga hero, is fueled mostly by righteous rage. But some other characters, such as Levi and Hange, are more openly willing to say "the end justifies the means." "If you're not willing to throw away something important, you'll never be able to do anything," one character says. "Our job is to die as courageously as we possibly can," says a soldier about to perform a suicide mission. At one point the heroes yell at frightened civilians, "If you're too scared to fight for yourselves, at least those who fight for you!!" In short, although it's not a racist manga, Attack on Titan is arguably a militaristic manga; it shows corrupt soldiers and incompetent generals, it shows senseless war deaths, but it also shows noble soldiers and good generals, it presents self-sacrifice for war as sometimes a necessary thing. Of course, many Americans have similar views about the U.S. military, but in Japan, such views are sometimes associated with right-wing nostalgia for WWII. When Isayama commented online that Dot Pixis, a heroic general in Attack on Titan, was based on Japanese general Akiyama Yoshifuru (1859-1930), Chinese and Korean Titan fans took this as evidence that Isayama was one such right-winger. (Though Yoshifuru died before World War II, he was involved in Japan's invasion and occupation of Korea.) Tweets about Japan's invasion of Korea attributed to Isayama's purported twitter continued the controversy and led to online threats against the artist. But ultimately I don't care so much about Isayama's personal views; I care what's in his manga. (Personally, I think the most right-wing plot element in Titan is the small racial detail that Mikasa is one of the last Asians in the world, and that Asians are rare and thus extra desirable. It's the kind of ethno-nationalistic plot point that shows up in manga like Sho Fumimura's Japan…and also, if the unspecified location of the story isn't anywhere near Asia, why is there a district called Shinganshina?) Beneath all the blood and grit, Attack on Titan might be a glorification of the military, it might be a criticism of the military, or it might be both. The Titans might be horrible monsters, they might be pitiful victims, they might be the future of humanity, or all three. It's boring to read a story where you already know the moral. Attack on Titan keeps me guessing, and that's a good thing. I'm 12 volumes in, and I still can't wait to find out what's on the other side of that wall.
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