The Advocate on Yuri Manga

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008 | Anime, Uncategorized with No Comments »

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I have stated my opnion on this site (several times) that America needs more yuri manga up in here. I’m glad to see that the LGBT magazine The Advocate agrees with me:

Read This Article!

It’s a very interesting, in-depth article about yuri in Japan and its slow journey to America. It also explains better than I ever could the attractions of yuri to a female audience!

As a straight female who likes love stories of all kinds, I say: more girl-on-girl action , please publishers!

Your neighbor is into hentai tentacle porn

Thursday, September 11th, 2008 | News with 1 Comment

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HentaiMSNBC’s Sexploration column discusses the mainstreaming of otaku fetishism, of all things - although they neatly overstep the twin-headed viper that is yaoi / yuri (unlike us, who unceasingly stare into the abyss so that we may spare you the horrors within…).

Guess that would’ve really scared the curious onlookers peeking in from the safety of their cubicle farms.

When anime conventions started in the U.S. back in the mid-1990s, the main demographic was mostly Asian college-age male students, says 32-year-old otaku expert Lawrence Eng. “Now, at least 50 percent are female,” he says. “Fandom itself is more diverse than ever.”

Within the adult realm of otaku culture, cuteness is fetishized (hence the Hello Kitty sex toys) and gender is often bent or dissolves altogether. Women are penetrated by octopi and young women in short school-girl skirts save the world. Men, on the other hand, are often passive worshipers of small figurines depicting sexy characters.

Yuri Menace: Kannazuki no Miko vol. 1

Monday, September 8th, 2008 | Anime, DVD Reviews with No Comments »

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Rating: ★★☆☆☆ 

The fact that there are lesbians in Kannazuki no Miko shouldn’t be a big deal. This is the 21st century after all, and I live in America, a >cough< enlightened country. And if sales of yaoi manga are any indication, anime fans are especially enlightened concerning homosexuality.

Unfortunately, the girl-on-girl love in Kannazuki no Miko is a big deal- but only because the unusual love triangle is the only thing the show has going for it.

The series opens in one of those fantastic, elite prep schools that doesn’t actually exist outside of anime. Himeko, one of a vast legion of orphaned anime characters, stays in the school dorms. She is the sort of girl we’re supposed to love: quiet, kind, timid, unbearably sweet. Except to a jaded old lady like me, it’s all too easy to see why her classmates feel contempt for her; she simply won’t stand up for herself. One of Himeko’s classmates doesn’t participate in tormenting her, however. Chikane is beautiful, kind abd good at everything, from archery to playing the piano. She’s the object of every girl-crush in the school, and is expected to marry Ohgami, her equally perfect male counterpart. But Ohgami actually likes Himeko…and so does Chikane.

Read the rest of this entry »

Yaoi Menace - SF Chronicle takes note of man-love manga

Monday, August 11th, 2008 | News with 1 Comment

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More news on the yaoi craze threatening to swallow your children whole - this time, from the San Francisco Chronicle (’Brokeback comics craze‘):

“Yaoi allows for a kind of enjoyment - visual stimulation without the self-examination,” says Tina Anderson, a writer whose yaoi is published in the United States and Germany. “It allows you to distance yourself from the fantasy.” What Anderson touches on is the way heterosexual sex in entertainment caters to the male point of view. A common complaint among high school manga and yaoi readers is that male-female sex shows the woman and little of the man. Yaoi, on the other hand, shows the man, and as one 15-year-old remarked, “It shows everything.”

But the popularity of yaoi and the demand for pornographic man-on-man love has brought the industry to a crisis. Publishers polybag and label their books (some even put boilerplates inside their flaps, stating that all characters depicted within are 19 or older), but no amount of shrink-wrap can protect them from the content itself - or the resistance of the large chain bookstores to carrying it.

“Everything in print is available and orderable for our customers,” says Jim Killen, graphic novels buyer at Barnes & Noble. B&N carries mature fare like Preacher and From Hell but doesn’t stock everything its Web site does. But there is a certain line that the retail chain refuses to cross.

My question (and it was posed to me as well by our fellow blogger AnaKhouri) is - where’s the Yuri-love? Surely girl-on-girl action is compelling in its’ own right, yes? And yet I don’t see a comparable explosion in yuri manga.