Jiya (Manga)
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| Jiya | |||
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Jiya first chapter title page spread from the 2010 #2/3 issue of Weekly Young Jump | |||
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| Author | Akira Toriyama, Masakazu Katsura | ||
| Publisher | Shueisha (JP) | ||
| Publication | Weekly Young Jump | ||
| Demographic | Seinen | ||
| Manga Series | |||
| Original Run |
Weekly Young Jump 2010 #2/3, #4/5, #6 (10 December 2009 - 07 January 2010) | ||
| Chapters | 3 | ||
Jiya is a three-chapter manga series by Akira Toriyama and Masakazu Katsura which originally ran in winter 2009-2010 in Shueisha's Weekly Young Jump magazine. Jiya marks the second entry in the authors' "Galactic Patrol" series, and Toriyama's first appearance in Weekly Young Jump.[1]
Synopsis

Galactic Patrolman Jiya arrives on Earth in search of his missing colleague Stece, but quickly finds himself fighting against alien interloper Vampa and his army of giant fleas, to say nothing of meddling in the affairs of two ordinary humans, spoiled rich girl Kaede Beniya and her put-upon valet Yukio Kyūmonji.
Characters
Major Characters
- Jiya (ジヤ Jiya): TBD
- Stece (ステス Sutesu): TBD
- Kaede Beniya (紅谷楓 Beniya Kaede): TBD
- Yukio Kyūmonji (九文字幸男 Kyūmonji Yukio): TBD
- Vamp (バンパ Banpa): TBD
Supporting Characters
- TBD
Miscellaneous
- TBD
Production
Jump SQ editor-in-chief Masahiko Ibaraki had expressed interest in having Akira Toriyama develop a work to be drawn with and for Masakazu Katsura, a manga author himself and longtime friend of Toriyama's. Toriyama called Katsura in the middle of the night to share the news that they would be collaborating, which Katsura thought to be a joke considering he was already serialized with ZETMAN in Weekly Young Jump.[2] The resulting work, Sachie-chan GOOD!!, served as the proper debut work in the "Galactic Patrol" series. At the time of its publication in early 2008, Toriyama felt that there was more to be done with the story, and that it perhaps could have been a short-term serial of about 100 pages. Katsura noted that Toriyama took a liking to the Galactic Patrol designs, and that Toriyama could write something in connection with it.[2]
For the duo's follow-up, the reverse situation occurred, with Katsura's editor at Weekly Young Jump requesting a collaboration for said magazine. Toriyama already had an idea for a "dark hero" in mind, and upon request from Katsura, agreed to return the favor. Toriyama fretted over his work from the very first chapter, with Katsura surprised that what was being produced was not actually as dark as Toriyama had indicated, requesting that he make it "dirtier". Toriyama worked on the storyboards, with Katsura providing the final art; while Katsura had wanted to do the more deformed style in Sachie-chan GOOD!, Toriyama requested that Jiya be more like how Katsura drew his Wingman series, which itself was not quite as realistic as his ZETMAN series. Despite the increasing page count as the duo worked, Katsura kept looking to toss out Toriyama's favorite "throwaway scenes", which he found the most fun to draw. In the battle scenes at the end of the series, Toriyama's initial storyboards placed the fight in the mountains (as if often the case in Dragon Ball); since Katsura's team was more used to drawing cityscapes, they adapted this scenario, even though what ultimately made its way to the page had little movement in the actual battle itself. The duo intended the series to be a one-shot, but the increasing page count led to it being split into three chapters, further resulting in Weekly Young Jump advertising it with phrases such as "super-deluxe concentrated serial!" and "new series!"[3]
Chapters

All three chapter of Jiya were published sequentially in Weekly Young Jump.
| # | Chapter Title | Issue Date | Sale Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Chapter 1: Journey with an Alien | Weekly Young Jump, 2010 No. 2/3 | 10 December 2009 |
| 2 | Chapter 2: Attack of an Alien | Weekly Young Jump, 2010 No. 4/5 | 24 December 2009 |
| 3 | Chapter 3: Justice of an Alien | Weekly Young Jump, 2010 No. 6 | 07 January 2010 |
A "Super-Deluxe Talk" interview with both Toriyama and Katsura was published the following Weekly Young Jump issue (2010 No. 7).[3]
Releases

Jiya was reprinted in full within the Katsura Akira (カツラアキラ katsuraakira) tankōbon-sized volume released 04 April 2014 in Japan, compiling both Sachie-chan GOOD!! and Jiya.[4]
Piracy groups "TBD!" and "TBD" released "scanlations" of Jiya in TBD.
Jiya has not received an official English translation/release.
Legacy



Unused Storyboards
Jaco the Galactic Patrolman was born out of unused storyboards and a plot originally created by Akira Toriyama during the production of Jiya; compositions and even exact dialog from this unused storyboard were used as-is in the series' first chapter.[3]
Galactic King
Following their battle with Stece, Jiya states that he will report back to the "Galactic King" that the Earth is worth protecting.[5] Though the Galactic King is not actually seen in the remaining pages of Jiya, the character is unveiled in Jaco the Galactic Patrolman, and is later featured in Dragon Ball Super. While the character is stated by Jiya to have "mysterious powers", these have not actually been showcased.
Galactic Patrol Prisoner arc
Toriyama and Toyotarō collaborated on the Galactic Patrol Prison arc of the Dragon Ball Super manga beginning in 2018, which continued to expand upon the lore of the Galactic Patrol within the context of the Dragon Ball franchise.[7] Designs similar to Jiya and the original Galactic Patrolmen in Sachie-chan can be seen in this run.
Galactic Patrol File on Earth
In the first chapter of Jiya, the titular Galactic Patrolman arrives on Earth to find water among other beautiful resources, not to mention humanity itself. Jiya wonders why this is so different from Stece's report, which stated the environment and humans themselves were not worth saving.[8] In the first chapter of Jaco the Galactic Patrolman, Jaco states that the Galactic Patrol has been informed that Earthlings are worthless creatures; Jaco was sent to help, but sees no reason to do so.[9] In the "Dragon Ball Minus" bonus chapter of Jaco the Galactic Patrolman (which takes place chronologically before the rest of the series), the Galactic King further expands on this, stating that Earth is still a developing planet ruled by a weak and immature race. Jaco himself states that he checked their data on the planet, and Earthlings indeed seem to be a sinister people.[10] In Dragon Ball Super manga chapter 53, as the trio of Shimorekka, Yunba, and OG73-I make their way to Earth, Seven-Three notes that data on "Planet 4032 Green-877" lists the planet as still being in the developmental stage and of little value. Seven-Three goes on to note, however, that this data comes from before they were arrested by the Galactic Patrol, and may be out of date.[11] Intentional or otherwise, these explanations in both Jaco the Galactic Patrolman and Dragon Ball Super align with and corroborate the falsified report by Stece in Jiya.
In the third and final chapter of Jiya, it is noted that the Earth would be annihilated by a meteor in a year's time, and that Stece was sent to investigate.[8] In the first chapter of Jaco the Galactic Patrolman, it is noted that the Galactic Patrol's radar system identified a projectile leaving a planet of brutal aliens, and that Jaco has arrived to defeat said alien and save humanity (despite their report on humans being worthless creatures).[9] No attempt to reconcile these differing accounts has been made within the series itself.
Notes
Each issue of Weekly Young Jump includes comments from that issue's respective authors. See the individual chapter pages for each respective set of comments.
External Links
- TBD
References
- ↑ "ヤンジャン30周年で鳥山明と桂正和がSFアクション『JIYA』で奇跡のコラボ" (03 December 2009). Oricon. Retrieved: 07 January 2020.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Akira Toriyama × Masakazu Katsura: Sachie-chan GOOD!! Collaboration One-Shot Talk". Jump SQ, May 2008. Japan: Shueisha, 02 April 2008. (pp. 267-269)
Kanzenshuu Translations Archive: "Akira Toriyama × Masakazu Katsura" - ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 "MASAKAZU KATSURA × AKIRA TORIYAMA: JIYA - The Two Great Masters of this Collaboration Have a Super-Deluxe Talk!!!". Weekly Young Jump, 2010 #7. Japan: Shueisha, 14 January 2010. (pp. 400-405)
Kanzenshuu Translations Archive: "Super-Deluxe Talk" - ↑ "鳥山明「銀河パトロール ジャコ」、桂正和との共作と同発" (03 April 2014). Natalie. Retrieved: 06 August 2019.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Toriyama, Akira; Katsura, Masakazu. Jiya Chapter 3: "Justice of an Alien". Weekly Young Jump, 2010 #6. Japan: Shueisha, 07 January 2010.
- ↑ Toriyama, Akira; Toyotarō. Dragon Ball Super Chapter 42: "Battle's End and Aftermath". V-Jump, January 2019. Japan: Shueisha, 21 November 2018.
- ↑ "Translations Archive: Toyotarō Comment - Dragon Ball Super: “Galactic Patrol Prisoner Arc”". Kanzenshuu.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Toriyama, Akira; Katsura, Masakazu. Jiya Chapter 1: "Journey With an Alien". Weekly Young Jump, 2010 #2/3. Japan: Shueisha, 10 December 2009.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Toriyama, Akira. Jaco the Galactic Patrolman Chapter 1: "The Galactic Patrolman Goes to Earth". Weekly Shōnen Jump, 2013 #33. Japan: Shueisha, 13 July 2013.
- ↑ TO-DO: DB Miuns
- ↑ Toriyama, Akira; Toyotarō. Dragon Ball Super Chapter 53: "Saganbo's Galactic Bandit Brigade". V-Jump, December 2019. Japan: Shueisha, 21 October 2019.
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