Archive for September, 2015


Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – September 12, 2015

September 12th, 2015

YNN_MariKYuri Manga

YNN Correspondent Chris D. has a heads up about a new Yuri series running in Dengeki Daioh, “Yagate Kimi ni Naru.” A girl asks her friend for advice about love only to have her friend to confess to her.

YNN Correspondent James W. is excited to tell you that Fujima Shion’s text and manga account of a her and her partner becoming parents in her Yurinin – Lesbian Couple Pregnancy Diary  (ゆりにん レズビアンカップル妊活奮闘記) is now available as a collected volume!

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LGBTQ Manga/Comics

YNN correspondent Emily C. also has exciting news – Nishi UKO-sensei’s Manga Tonari no Robot, has received the “Sense of Gender” award from the Japanese Association of Gender Fantasy & Science Fiction. You can read her acceptance letter on the JAGF&S website. Congratulations!

Prism Comics announces new queer comics anthology. ALPHABET – The LGBTQAI comics creators from Prism Comics to benefit the Queer Press Grant. And they have opened submissions to their Queer Comics Showcase.

 

Other News

The hottest new comic in the USA celebrates the real heroes we all know – mothers. Raising Dion is about a mother with a super-powered son and the challenges that come along with trying to steer him on a path of kindness. Watch the awesome trailer and read the first issue for free, but if you can, please support this project with money, too.

Heidi MacDonald report that French women cartoonists launch a website “against comics sexism” on The Comics Beat.

And we’re going to wrap this up with The Economist’s excellent review of LGBTQ Pioneer Lillian Faderman’s new book, The Gay Revolution, a comprehensive history of America’s Gay Rights movment.

 

Know some cool Yuri News you want people to know about? Become a Yuri Network Correspondent by sending me any Yuri-related news you find. Emails go to anilesbocon01 at hotmail dot com. Not to the comments here, please, or they might be forgotten or missed. There’s a reason for this madness. This way I know you are a real human, not Anonymous (which I do not encourage – stand by your words with your name!) and I can send you a YNN correspondent’s badge.
Thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network!





LGBTQ Manga: Torikaebaya (とりかえ・ばや ), Volume 7

September 10th, 2015

TKB7In Volume 6, Sarasojuu lost the child, and Suiren left court to look for her…and found her. In Volume 7 of Torikaebaya (とりかえ・ばや ) by Saitou Chiho, together they visit Yoshino no Miya-sama, a man wise beyond his years, who already knows about their secret.

While they are at Yoshino no Miya-sama’s place, the Mikado comes to visit and their learn some amazing things. The Mikado is Yoshino’s older brother and Toguu-sama is Yoshino’s daughter. In exchange for a vow to protect Toguu-sama, as she has few allies in the capital, Yoshino promises to help the siblings. They, to the utter delight of their family, return home. (Their family has been a high point of the series from the beginning. Totally supportive and loving.)

At which point we come to the most interesting moment to date in this amazing & infuriating manga. Because the “help” Yoshino offers is to assist them to trade places. In the original Torikaebaya, the “trading” was the original choice for them to take the place of their sibling in the other sex’s world in order to be more comfortable with themselves. In this version, it is the moment they leave the life they had known and were comfortable in to “trade” to the world that did not suit them at all. In short, Sarasojuu would become Suiren and serve Toguu-sama and Suiren would take the position of a man at court, as Sarasojuu.

And so they do. Suiren still can’t stand being too close to men, and has a tendency to be delicate, but passes as Sarasojuu. Sarasojuu walks too fast and speaks too loudly for a woman at court and, although mostly everyone just assumes she is Suiren, Toguu-sama sees right through her instantly.
Sarasojuu confides in Togu-sama, and even allows her to speak to Suiren, who assures her that they are her allies from beginning to end. And in this, they are completely in synch. They will do everything to protect this young woman.

Finally a good thing happens. The Udaisho, Sara and Suiren’s father, begs the Mikado to *not* ask for Suiren to come up to the palace to be one of his women.  Mikado graciously agrees, so I steeled myself against something else horrible happening instead. ^_^;

The “something” turned out to be an assassination attempt on Toguu-sama. Sara (as Suiren) is able to move quickly, but it is another lady-in-waiting that makes it possible to capture the miscreant. Her name, she says, is San-no-hime. Sara-Suiren is shocked…is this her wife’s sister? Indeed it is. And now that they have become confidants, will Suiren help her? She’d like the Mikado to take notice of her. Um, sure, Sara says, wondering what on earth she could possibly do.

This series makes me chew my liver out, it really does. But that the “trading places”is not in the initial switch but here is so fascinating and modern, I’m foolishly still holding onto my hope that there is some small possibility of this all working out. Hey, I wanted only one thing from Gunjo, and I got that, so yeah. I’m sticking with foolish dreams.

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 8
Characters – 9
Service – 1
LGBTQ – 7

Overall – 9

Compelling like a train wreck, I cannot stop reading this.





LGBTQ Panels at New York Comic Con

September 8th, 2015

nycc-logo-largeThe Panel schedule is up for New York Comic Con (October 8-11), and they’ve added a handful of LGBTQ topics to the schedule this year. I’ll be on the Friday Gay Manga Panel with moderator Deb Aoki, Christopher Butcher and Anne Ishii. It’s going to be an amazing conversation, so I hope you’ll join us!

Thu. Oct. 8
5:15 – 6:15 pm New York TimesOUT presents LGBT in Comics
Location: Room 1A21

Fri. Oct. 9
12:30 – 1:30 pm Gay Manga, Yaoi, and Yuri: LGBTQ Fantasy vs. Reality in Manga 
Location: Room 1A05

4:00 – 5:00 pm End Bullying: Becoming a Superhero IRL 
Location: Room 1A21Sat.

Saturday, Oct. 10
1:30 – 2:30 pm Prism Comics Presents: Autobiography in Queer Comics 
Location: Room 1A01Sun.

Sunday, Oct. 11
2:30 – 3:30 pm Culturally Queer: The Explosion of LGBTQ Representation in Mainstream Comics & Pop Culture 
Location: Room 1A24

I will definitely be at Comic Con Friday, and probably Thursday, as well. The weekend is still up in the air.

LGBTQ Exhibitors will include:

GeeksOUT  – Tbl. 15751

NorthwestPress & Prism Comics – Tble 1483

As more content/exhibitors are announced, I’ll populate this list, so bookmark it!





Lesson from the Heart of Darkness Fandom

September 7th, 2015

smsWe’ve entered that phase of my to-review piles where the Novels taunt me with their 400 pages of unremitting 8pt Japanese text. I am reading as fast as I can, but will have fewer reviews if only because I read about 30 pages a day on a good day. My eyes just sort of stop seeing anything after a while.

In the meantime, as I have safely and successfully passed an age landmark that includes both zeroes and fives, I wanted to share an important lesson I have learned with you, my dear readers. I am the product of a person who was a super-duper nerd back in the day when “nerd” didn’t mean “makes millions in tech” and a person who has absolutely no interest in nerdly things…or even things. (My seminal story on this was the day when my parents came to visit and Dad sat there playing with every single Sailor Moon wand, hitting all the buttons and playing the music, and Mom, who had her back to him said, shaking her head, “I don’t know where you get your collecting things from.”)

Anyway, here’s the most important thing I’ve learned in 50 years:

Have fun the way you want to.

It doesn’t matter at all if other people don’t understand it as long as it makes sense to you.

Let me remind you that I will be having my brand of fun next month at New York Comic Con (NYC, October 8-11) and Nijicon (Philadelphia, October 24-25)

And if you want to access my /coughcough/wisdom – send me a question for the next Q&A online streaming Yuri panel, which I have not yet picked a date for, but will probably be in November!





Lesbian Comic Anthology: Freya – Sequential Love Stories

September 6th, 2015

Freya_2015This past year I mentioned a crowdfunding effort for a series of European LGBTQ manga anthologies, Frey and Freya (both named after Norse Gods.*) I jumped at the idea of getting it off the ground and have now had a chance to read it. And, it was fun and good. But while I read it, I realized that we really need to talk about something.

Young lesbian artists, may I ask you politely to stop saying you drew this “because there’s nothing like it out there”? Yes, there is. You may not know where to find it, or have seen it, but yes, yes it is “out there” and we’re long past this being a valid sentence. Just because you’ve never searched “Lesbian comics” or  you don’t know about “Yuri manga,” does not mean something does not exist in the universe – just as series’ don’t end just because you stop following them. ^_^ We are at a point in human existence when it is both self-indulgent and foolish to insist that something doesn’t exist before you do it. It’s way more likely that you aren’t forging a brand-new never-been-done-path in LGBTQ storytelling, but are merely walking a well-trodden one. Other people are gay. Other people draw comics. Lesbian comics exist – and have existed for many years.

Also, crowdfunders, please make sure to print a few extra copies of your books, so when I review it, people can buy it. It’s depressing to say “Well, this was great, but you had to fund it to get one. Sorry.”

So Freya Anthology arrived and, like all anthologies, it has variable art and stories. A number of things really stand out to my American eye – the artists in this anthology, who are mostly from Sweden, like those from the Finnish anthology, Lepakkoluola, are way better at diversity than Americans and Japanese are. Also, I found the collection to be a really pleasant mix of fantasy, slice-of-real-life, history and sci-fi.

There were any number of stories about competent and strong women, although the girl-as-reward trope was too prevalent for my comfort. Balancing this out, there were few coming out stories, and even those were “go tell her you like her” rather than, “Do I like girls?”

 

The art styles are decidedly western – the one manga-inspired story, “Bubble” by Elise Rosberg, really stood out as an exception to the rule. Natalia Batista‘s wordless, and heavily black-and-grey work, “La Perte” was my personal favorite. The dark pages too my aback at first, but the story was solid, had emotional depth and the art really grew on me.

Ratings:

Art and Stories variable. It’s an anthology.

Overall – 7

An excellent anthology and one that I will gladly add to my growing “international” lesbian comic collection. I know that the Frey and Freya circle is making the round of European events, and they do have a Facebook page, and it looks like you you can order a copy directly from them, so definitely contact them!

*The Frey anthology will focus on gay relationships.