Talk:Sailor Moon/to do
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- Reception section:
- Add feminist criticism - http://www.alltrees.org/anime/willowandoak/sm.resp.php is a response to the two major Sailor Moon academic essays.
- Allison, Anne [June 2000]. "Sailor Moon: Japanese Superheroes for Global Girls", in Timothy J. Craig: Japan Pop!: Inside the World of Japanese Popular Culture. M.E. Sharpe, 259-278. ISBN 0-765-60560-0.
- "Girl Talk with Sailor Moon" (1996) Animerica 4(8): 6-7, 18-19
- Decker, D. (1998) "Beyond Sailor Moon", Animerica 6(11) 6-10, 25.
- http://www.corneredangel.com/amwess/papers/non_western_sexuality.pdf
- Evolution of Female Heroes: Carnival Mode of Gender Representation in Anime
- Grigsby, Mary (1999) "The Social Production of Gender as Reflected in Two Japanese Culture Industry Products: Sailormoon and Crayon Shin-Chan." In Lent, John A. (ed.), Themes and Issues in Asian Cartooning: Cute, Cheap, Mad and Sexy. Bowling Green: Bowling Green State University Popular Press. 183-210.
Napier, Susan J. (1998) "Vampires, Psychic Girls, Flying Women and Sailor Scouts: Four Faces of the Young Female in Japanese Popular Culture." In Martinez, D.P. (ed.), The Worlds of Japanese Popular Culture: Gender, Shifting Boundaries and Global Cultures. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 91-109. - in Sailor Senshi
- Orbaugh, Sharalyn (2003) "Busty Battlin' Babes: The Evolution of the Shojo in 1990s Visual Culture." In Mostow, Joshua, Norman Bryson, and Maribeth Graybill (eds.), Gender and Power in the Japanese Visual Field. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. 201-28.
- Lee Brimmicombe-Wood and Motoko Tamamuro, "Hello Sailor!," MangaMax 19 (August 2000): 30.
- Animation in Asia and the Pacific, esp. chapter 2
- Expand on Dave Barry
- Add Anime Academy review
- Find/Translate Japanese sources:
- Ask at Wikipedia:WikiProject Anime and manga/Magazines and Wikipedia:WikiProject Anime and manga/Reference Library for any relevant information and incorporate it.