Archive for the Yuri Manga Category


Kabi Nagata: Opening Doors at an Intersection

February 16th, 2020

Students of literature or art often find themselves reading analysis of an author’s work long past the author’s own lifetime, whether it be Edgar Allen Poe or Murasaki Shikibu. Manga and anime studies are not that old and, as a result, when one begins to study manga and anime in earnest, one sometimes encounters an unusual phenomenon – the subject of one’s research is often alive and still creating. Sure you might read about Tezuka Osamu, but you might also find yourself reading works by or about Riyoko Ikeda.

A few years ago, I reviewed a manga that had been getting a lot of buzz in Japan. Based on an online diary, Sabishi-sugi Rezu Fuzoku ni Ikimashita Report (さびしすぎてレズ風俗に行きましたレポ) was breaking barriers and breaking sales records. The story itself – a manga autobiography of living with crushing depression and an eating disorder – was, I thought, unlikely to get an English translation. While diary comics had been published in translation previously, they were usually the work of well-established “elder” artists, such as Yoshihiro Tatsumi‘s A Drifting Life. Looking back at our own life in retrospect is, to some extent, the function of autobiography. So, even though we, as readers, have become more accustomed to the idea of the “real-time” diaries of social media as a way to understand our worlds in the form of blogs and social media posts, we don’t automatically assign that kind of communication a “literary” status until they become retrospective. Kabi Nagata changed that, in actual real time, while we watched.

By using social tools like Pixiv, and Twitter, Nagata gathered a global following with her diary – which was published in English in 2017 as best-selling manga My Lesbian Experience With Loneliness, proving me happily wrong.

It’s not often that we are able to see as an entire industry makes a shift into new territory right in front of us. It’s much more common that we only notice that change as we look back and learn about an artist’s contributions to their oeuvre after they are gone, like Julius Eastman‘s foundational work in downtown music. And so, I want to take a moment today to acknowledge what Kabi Nagata has done for manga, before she’s even had a chance to finish doing it.

 

Comic Essay

In the 2000s when I first started picking up Feel Young and other Josei magazines, among the manga included was a daily diary by well-known manga artist Erica Sakurazawa. She drew about her family and the kinds of typical situations in which an adult woman might find herself. This was my first encounter with what would soon become known as the “Comic Essay” genre. Common in magazines for woman, these comic essays by women gave the readers the sense that they were seen – that their lives were understood. Sakurazawa has continued to put out diary-style manga, as well as fiction and currently publishes comics on her blog as well as in print.

As the 2000s progressed, the “Comic Essay” section of Japanese bookstores grew in size. More artists contributed tales of child-bearing and child-raising. By the 2010s some of the top names in Jousei manga were drawing daily life comic essays.  Comic essays are not only for or about women, consider Junji Ito’s Cat Diary, but I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that autobiographical comics resonate very strongly for women. Where men’s autobiographies tend to be bildungsroman about their adolescent development into adulthood, women’s autobiographies often center their ordinary lives, giving visibility to what remains invisible. Moyoco Anno’s manga about her life with her husband, celebrated anime director Hideaki Anno, Insufficient Direction, is a comedic essay about the ordinariness of two extraordinary people’s lives together. Comic essays remain a popular format for the display of women’s inner lives. Princess Jellyfish creator Akiko Higashimura has found a whole new kind of success with her autobiographical essay series Blank Canvas: My So-Called Artist’s Journey.

In the west, the artist who has seen the greatest commercial success with comic essays of her own life, is Raina Telegemeier, whose Smile, Sisters, and Guts gave voice to tween and teen girls worldwide. (Middle-grade readers are traditionally ignored by superhero comics companies but, are in actual fact, one of the top market for comics.) The editorial copy for Guts is telling, “Raina Telegemeier once again brings us a thoughtful, charming, and funny true story about growing up and gathering the courage to face — and conquer — her fears.” This is exactly the function of comic essays – uncovering those inner demons;low self-esteem, illness, even boredom and complacency in a relationship, and normalizing them. This is my life, comic essays say, this is your life.

By the 2010s, artists all over the globe were using social communities to draw their comic and manga essays. So when Nagata began her comic diary on art platform Pixiv, she was joining a tradition of great artists before her and bringing the format to a whole new generation of people. With My Lesbian Experience With Loneliness, Nagata, like Telegemeier, stood at the intersection of life and health and threw the door open.

 

Graphic Medicine Manga

Among things that are universally “not to be discussed at the dinner table” universe, mental health and illness are right up there among the top, along with sex and politics. Humans are still unsure of how to deal with mental health, both medically and socially.  For anyone in any media to admit to depression is still considered a form of “coming out” – an act of making public what is treated as a private burden.

In her first book, Nagata-sensei took her depression, the physical manifestations of that depression, and how it created an inability to form intimate relationships, into the public eye for people to see and comment on. Even behind a mask of pseudonymity, this was an act of bravery. And it was an act that changed people’s lives, as readers online thanked her and started sharing their own stories in her comments. What had been a purely private issue, something to not-be-discussed, was being uncovered and talked about.

While in the west comics creators were birthing a new graphic medicine genre with works like Jennifer Hayden’s The Story of My Tits, Nagata-sensei had opened the door to real stories of real people dealing with mental health issues in manga form.

Following the success of her first book, she continued her comic diary online. While working through her physical ailments, she started to have energy to address her relationship with her family and her desire and inability to build connections with other people. These became her series Hitori Koukan Nikki (一人交換日記), which were published in English as My Solo Exchange DiaryVolume 1 and Volume 2.

In the meantime, other manga artists had taken the opportunity to “come out” about mental health, as well. Akiko Morishima drew a lovely comic essay about living with ADHD in Otona no Hattatsu Shougai Kamoshirenai!? (おとなの発達障害かもしれない! ?). Morishima is known as a long-time Yuri artist with a very cute style of art. Her gentle art style doesn’t make the story any less powerful as she searches for ways to move forward with her new understanding, in a similar-yet-different path to Nagata’s own quest.

Yet another door has been opened, and I don’t think we’re likely to see it shut again. As mental health becomes increasingly de-stigmatized by those artists speaking up in public and normalizing mental health issues as just another kind of medical issue, it is likely to become more common, not less, to see more graphic medicine manga.

 

Queer Narrative

In western comics, the coming out narrative is so common, so expected, that even now I find myself surprised when I read a book or comic that doesn’t have at least a scene dedicated to the big reveal…even if, ultimately, that isn’t a thing for the other characters in a book. If there’s a defining quality to “coming out” in novels here in the USA in 2020, it’s that…it’s not a thing at all. Bye-bye coming out as trauma, we won’t miss you!

But manga is not science fiction, or YA, manga is another medium from a country that is slowly and steadily working towards LGBTQ equality, but is not there, not yet. Nonetheless, even in an industry as frequently heteronormative and conservative as manga publishing, queer-facing comics (as opposed to straight-facing comics about being sexual and gender minorities, like Gengoroh Tagame’s mainstream men’s manga My Brother’s Husband or Chii’s transgender life comic essay, The Bride Was a Boy,) are creeping in; artistic wildflowers growing up in the midst of a paved walkway. Takemiya Jin is one of the handful of out lesbian manga artists in Japan; her series Itoshi Koishi is an unusual Yuri manga that shows a young lesbian’s life as a wholly positive experience. Her older lover is kind and supportive and never pressures her in any way to do anything; her friends adore her and yet, when she feels that she wants to come out to them, she still feels stress. Coming out, which until recently was a hand-of-god narrative complication, resulting in loss of family, friends, and jobs, is less likely to be so dramatic these days, but it’s never easy.

One of the  – even fewer –  comic essays written by and about a woman in a relationship with another woman is in the same magazine that carried Itoshi Koishi, Comic Yuri Hime, a monthly Yuri manga magazine. Notice I don’t say it is a “lesbian comic”, or even a comic essay about lesbian life. For a monthly magazine that prints Yuri manga, there have been few lesbians in the 15 years of the magazine’s run.

So, when Nagata writes about herself in her first book, “By the way– when it comes to free hugs, gender doesn’t matter to me. But for anything more that that, I’d only want to purse it with a woman.” she joined that handful of out lesbian manga artists. That her narrative is not about being gay, but about her relationship with her body, with how she relates to (or doesn’t relate to) the world, does not change that her entire story is a queer woman’s story. And with that, Nagata flung open a third door in which a creator can relate with honesty, their sexuality and their relationship to their body.

 

Not “The End” 

Nagata’s story is not over. This article is not a retrospective of an influential artist’s life and work after their death. Nagata is creating new work, even as we speak. She has fiction manga coming out shortly in an anthology and her own collection. She’s doing cover illustration and, while all of that is happening, she’s still telling her readers the stories about her life, her health, her trials and tribulations.

Like other comic essayists, Nagata has already given voice and visibility to people whose stories have been obscured. Here at the intersection, she’s laid groundwork for people to discuss their mental health and for queer folks to speak of their lives matter-of-factly.

In her most recent book, Genjitsu Touhishitetara Boroboro ni Natta Hanashi (現実逃避してたらボロボロになった話), Nagata chronicles even more serious physical ailments, this time pancreatitis as a side effect of alcohol abuse. We ride along as she once again pulls herself out of a  deep well made in conjunction with the imbalanced chemical cocktail of her brain and body. It’s a testament to her strength of will (and a functional national healthcare system) that she is still capable of healing.

More importantly, as we read about her desire to create new, non-essay work, it’s a testament to her creative drive, her artistic and narrative abilities, that from inside all of these mental and physical health crises, there is a talented and unique voice who wants to be seen and heard. Perhaps then, she has more doors to blast through, as she gives voice to creatives  whose work, rendered obscure by illness, poverty, gender, sexuality, ethnicity, skin color, ability or other forms of marginalization, find something in her story to resonate to.

Nagata has already changed what we read and how we read it, so it seems very fitting to also let her be the person who changes how we recognize that kind of paradigm shift, as well. Her body of work is notable enough that it’s worth noting now, during her life. I hope this will inspire other people to do more analysis of her work while she is still creating it and change the way literary critics will have to approach literary criticism for some time to come. ^_^





Yuri Manga: Kase-san and Yamada (English)

February 13th, 2020

Yamada is experiencing college life and it’s keeping her super busy. Kase-san is, as well. It’s a struggle for them to find time to be together and when they are, a lot of of their old habits keep them apart. And, neither of them have ever really decided what their relationship means to them as an individual. In Kase-san and Yamada, the sixth book of the Kase-san series, all of this will land on their heads, all at once.

Yamada makes a new friend, Hana, who is shockingly similar to herself in personality, which sets up a crisis with Kase-san, whom we have seen previously is prone to jealousy. Yamada also undergoes a crisis of jealousy, which is unusual enough for her that’s she’s not really sure what she’s feeling.

But what really stands out for me is that both Yamada and Kase-san are new enough to dating – and not around other queer couples – that they are both very closeted and don’t actually realize it.

On Twitter, I was chatting with some folks about this. When my wife and I moved out together, we were in a similar position for years – alone among peers and coworkers and schoolmates for whom being gay was not at all everyday, Coming out was not just a big thing for one’s own life, an admission of self, but a huge fucking load of baggage that could open people up to harassment, losing jobs, losing family or worse. That was a long time ago and seems to young people I know now a bit remote and abstract, but as the discussion went on we heard from folks in China and Japan who affirmed that being out was still quite fraught and who to be out to and how far to be out are everyday concerns.

I recently finished reading a YA lesbian romance that was very out in and of itself. Tell Me How You Really Feel, by Aminah Mae Safi has two women on the cover in a romantically intimate moment, with a pullquote that reads “The queer hate-to-love story you need in your life” on the cover. In the story, both protagonists are themselves out to friends, schoolmates and family, a priori and I think we’re still hoping that Kase-san and Yamada will one day be able to be comfortable being the people they are. We want to see them as happy, out young lesbians. But, they aren’t. And they won’t be because its not normalized in their society (and, more specifically, the society Takashima-sensei inhabits.) Instead, their discomfort is played for comedy. And how we feel about that says more about ourselves than the characters since they are merely ciphers for our own needs.

But when we take ourselves out of the equation. Yamada and Kase-san make some important progress in this issue. They increase the intimacy between them as adults and individuals, something that they could not have done in their hometown where other people’s expectations would create even more inflexible boundaries around them.

So, it may be true that they are not “out” as we understand that, but they make important steps towards being people who could support each other if they choose to come out in their future.

As we have come to expect from Seven Seas, the book’s technicals are lovely, with a really nice raised lettering cover and thick page count, so it feels like a substantial contribution to this series.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Characters – 8
Story – 7
Service – Does Kase-san in a suit count? Yes. 7
Yuri – 9 The real world is making itself more known.

Overall – 9

I’m still hoping for a scene in which they go to a Pride parade and a famous lesbian couple of a violinist and race car driver are the marshals. Just sayin’.





Yuri Manga: White Lilies in Love Watashi ga Yoishireru no ha, Natsu no Hizashi to Anata Dake. Shakaijin Yuri Anthology (White Lilies in Love 私が酔いしれるのは、夏の陽射しと貴方だけ。 社会人百合アンソロジー)

February 12th, 2020

Kadokawa’s “White Lilies” series of anthologies have been good and goofy and fun and sad. White Lilies in Love Watashi ga Yoishireru no ha, Natsu no Hizashi to Anata Dake. Shakaijin Yuri Anthology (White Lilies in Love 私が酔いしれるのは、夏の陽射しと貴方だけ。 社会人百合アンソロジー) is more of the same and happens to also include some of the top adult life Yuri creators in the biz right now, which makes for a really pleasant read. This member of the series of vaguely seasonalish collections is subtitled in English “Drunk Only To The Summer Sunshine And You.” Prepositions and particles are complicated and we understand the sentiment, so that’s fine.

Inui Ayu starts the collection off with a sweet (pun intended) story about women who bond over shaved ice. It was, frankly, adorable. Women meet on vacation and at work, they meet after long separations, and fall for each other after being together day and after day. The collection includes work by Suzuki-sempai, Seta Seta, Hazuki Ruri and Kurukuruhime, all names we’ve become familiar with here on Okazu.

Without a doubt the final story was my favorite. Called “Blue Well he Youkoso” by Yuki Yukiko, it is a by-the-shore love story that has a surprising ending. ^_^

Ratings:

Overall – 8

A strong collection in terms of story and art. This would make a great collection for Yen to put out if they wanted more adult-life stories. It’s one of those anthologies that makes you really enjoy anthologies. ^_^





Yuri Manga: Kanade Aoharu Band Yuri Anthology (青春バンド百合アンソロジー)

February 10th, 2020

Well, so, Kanade  Aoharu Band Yuri Anthology (青春バンド百合アンソロジー) is definitely a Yuri anthology in which characters are near musical instruments and occasionally even play them. Which is not at all the same as being about people in bands. A couple of the included stories even go so far as to show members of a band. One especially derivative story is about two girls who play euphonium in a school whose uniforms look super familiar, but are not entirely the same, so it could not possibly be a rip-off. The Takeshima Eku story and a couple of others seems a little too like unused plot concepts from already existing Comic Yuri Hime story.

As you may be able to tell, I was a little disappointed with this collection. I had hoped it would be full of passionate relationships between girls in bands, but instead it read like rehashing of other series that we’re already watching or reading.

If you want to read stories that feel like other stories, so backpack on emotions you have from other stories, this a pretty gentle, safe way to do it. Nothing here is offensive. It’s just not what I had hoped from this collection. I have a lot of good and bad memories from my time in band and I could easily see so many of those situations leading to love. But sure, let’s just use the two or three scenarios we’re already familiar with. That’s okay, too.

Ratings:

Overall – 7

The art is good, the storytelling is fine, I can’t remember a single story seconds after I finish it.

I will share this with you. Via YNN Correspondent Verso S., here is a completely-worth-your-time video analysis of some of the music from Liza and the Blue Bird, which was vastly superior to every story in this collection. It got to me to sit still for 20+ minutes and listen and that’s saying something. Enjoy An Overlooked Track from Liz and the Blue Bird.

Did you know that a Flugelhorn is really a soprano tuba with its highly conical bore shape and a Euphonium is 3 or 4-valve, often compensating, conical-bore, tenor instrument which is not related to tuba, but is closer to other conical-bore instruments like flugelhorn, trumpet or cornet. I just thought you might want to know.





Yuri Anthology: LiLium Yuri Anthology, Vol. 1 / リリウム 百合アンソロジー

February 7th, 2020

Comic Zin is the bomb. I’ve probably mentioned it before, but it’s a teeny little cave crammed full of treasures. Across the street and down a block or so from Toranoana in Akihabara, there’s a big sign that reads “ZIN” You go up narrow steep stairs (my wife calls the “harrowing,”) to one room, so chock-full of randomness that you instant think, “I am doing doujinshi storage all wrong: and “Ooohhh…train tables in manga form!” Well, you you may think that, if you can get past the first three sets of shelves on which are a surprisingly decent collection of Yuri doujinshi that you totally need.  Or, you can use a buying service and visit their website. But that’s not nearly as much fun.

Which is where I finally found a doujinshi put out by LiLium Plan, a Twitter account I’d been following for ages. LiLium Yuri Anthology, Vol. 1 (リリウム 百合アンソロジー) is described on it’s Amazon page as “8 stories of cute, beautiful, precious love to happy sexual relationships, between young couples and adult women in society. Packed full of moe situations.”

Most of the names here are new to me, with one exception. Takashima Hiromi, creator of the Kase-san series, has a short story in this collection about two girls who meet on the train. Quite possibly the story I liked the most – and brace yourselves, because I have never said this before – was about a maid and her mistress, a girl who uses a wheelchair, by Edoya Petit, “La Fleur Artificielle.” It turned really dark and creepy at the end and I’m not sure why, but I think I liked it anyway? It’s hard to tell if I liked it, or just couldn’t look away. ^_^ 

The art is decent throughout and while the collection does nothing new, it’s also doesn’t suck while handling anything old. And now I have new names to watch for. Volume 2 will be released at Comitia (tomorrow in Japan,) so if doujinshi anthologies are your boom and you’re at Big Site, go to U06ab and grab a copy!

Ratings:

Overall – 8

This is it, I think…the last thing I picked up as part of the 100 Years of Yuri Tour that I am going to review. Unless it isn’t. ^_^ Onward into a new century!