Yuri Magazine: Comic Yuri Hime June 2019 (コミック百合姫2019年6月号)

June 11th, 2019

It’s my great pleasure to be able to discuss with you another solid issue of monthly magazine Comic Yuri Hime for June 2019 (コミック百合姫2019年6月号).

A news series has begun, and based on the opening color pages, I will be wholly ignoring “Yurimeguri yuimeguri.” Aside from childish faces on too-adult bodies and bathing scenes it appears to have little going for it. This is a series who knows it’s own audience and doesn’t care about me. I am convinced that it was commissioned to be turned into an anime, which I will also ignore.

I’m quite fascinated by the nothings-going-on of Miman’s “Watashi no Yuri ha Shigoto desu!” because really, nothing much can be going on, since our cast is approximately 7 people, a pair of which are taken up with each other. So we turn back to Yano, who is deeply struggling as is Hime. It’s been established that they each believe they were the victim, and from our perspective they were both also the bad guy. But what they have not yet had is the conversation they need to work through all of this. And really, after holding onto it for so many years, would it even be possible to talk this through? Yano doesn’t think so – she can neither forgive, nor forget.. Hime seems to believe there is nothing to forgive. This is going to have to come to some kind of a head.

“Luminous Blue” by Iwami Kikyoko is edging slowly, but inexorably, towards a crisis that we have been able to see coming for months.

I still really like Takeshima Eku’s “Sasayaku Youni Koi o Utau” for reasons I cannot define. Perhaps that everyone seems so drama-free and just enjoy each other’s company?

FLOWERCHILD’S “Warikitta Kankei desukara” is meant to make me feel uncomfortable…and so it does.

Hisona’s “Goodbye Dystopia” is meant to make me feel nostalgic and fails. But it feels so much like something is about to come to an end in that. I hope it’s not the series.

In “Itoshi Koishi” Hina is going to have to decide what to do with her life. Imma gonna guess and say she’ll study baking or cooking because, we’re headed there. In a weak moment, seduced by chocolate and Hinano’s adorableness, Yayoi breaks down and gives her an adult kiss. I’m waiting patiently for what I believe will eventually be an actual coming out scene in this manga. It’s got the right setup.

“Ikemensugi desu Shiki-senpai” has now entered conventional romance territory, and I kinda like it. By necessity, both Shiki and Hina end up coming out-ish and realize that they really, really, really want to be together. I’m all for it.

Ratings:

Overall – 8

As every other month, these are not the only stories in the magazine, nor even all the ones I read. I am following all but three of the current serializations, and those you could not pay me to read. ^_^ So, something for everyone.

A solid volume and another one on the way. I’ve just gone through the July issue and if anything, I think it was even a little better.

 

 

 



LGBTQ Comic: Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me (English)

June 10th, 2019

Freddy Riley is lucky. She’s going out with popular Laura Dean. Freddy’s got good friends who are understanding when she’s required by Laura to run off at a moment’s notice, or go over to her house. And Freddy’s most okay with it, but she really hates that Laura breaks up with her, then they get back together then she breaks them up again.

And the thing is, Freddy’s friends aren’t actually okay with Laura Dean’s behavior. In fact, it’s pretty obvious to them that Laura Dean is jerking Freddy around. They are there when she needs them, but.

Freddy’s not all that okay with it, either, to be honest, but she cannot see her way out of the cycle. And in the meantime, she’s not there when her friends need her.

The configuration of the relationship is never the problem. The nature of the relationship is the problem. But when tables turn and Freddy learns that her absence has made a difference, she also manages to find it in herself to be non-judgey. And, eventually to deal with the problem in her relationship with Laura Dean which, of course, is Laura Dean.

Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me is an honest, unpretentious and non-judgemental book about being a high school student in the real world. And I think, if a lit teacher is out there still teaching Rumble Fish or, gods help us, A Separate Peace, then there is no excuse for not reading this book as part of the curriculum. I’d suggest this to any Freshman high school teacher. (Knowing full well that some schools would still have a kitten with such an openly queer story and other YA lit themes.)

Mariko Tamaki and Rosemary Valero-O’Connell do a smashing job of nailing tone and feel of high school life and an equally excellent job of taking a look at a queer kid’s life and love without it being a coming out drama. Art, narrative flow and voice are all spot on. Grey, black, white and pink as a color scheme has now become a staple for “emotional drama” in my head. ^_^The visuals are strong, the characters are well-defined and the situations felt exactly the same density of the problems I dealt with at that age.

 

Ratings:

Art – 9
Story – 9
Characters – Urm, well, this is a tough one. Not sure I’d want any of them over except Dodo, who seems the right kind of dorky. But they are well-done, so let’s say 7
Service – 1?
LGBTQ – 10

Overall – 9

I also want to shout out to the one adult in the story who nails the problem and the solution earlyish in the books. Freddy still had to take her time to get there, but yay for adult experience. As an adult reading this book, you’re also likely to know what the solution to Freddy’s problem is before a few pages have passed, but that is not the story. The story is watching Freddy get there.



LGBTQ Live-Action: Gentleman Jack

June 9th, 2019

In a world where every generation of people seem to need all of history explained to them, personally, or they don’t “get” why we need a Pride month, it’s sometimes easy to feel a sense of disconnection from history.

The Stonewall Uprising happened 50 years ago – I recommend the American Experience episode on Stonewall for first-person recounting of what happened and why. If you haven’t read Lillian Faderman’s The Gay Revolution: The Story of the Struggle, consider it assigned reading for this Pride Month, as well. ^_^

The protests we’re seeing this year tend to be about pushing back against rainbow capitalism and corporate overrun of Pride events – and these are legitimate issues, but there is also a welcome renewed “in your face”-ism about Pride, as a whole generation of hate groups show up to the party, enabled by the downfall of empathy in our governing bodies; so we’re back to having fun as loudly and publicly as possible to remind people that we won’t be forced back into the closet.

Most folks are probably not all that clear on the who and whats of even recent LGBTQ history, literature or art, much less events in the distant past. As I’m starting to see a whole generation of young people who are new to the ongoing struggle, I find I do want to re-establish those connections. Especially as we’re once again finding ourselves facing increasing violence and bias. It’s good to remind ourselves that we are not alone now…and we have never been alone.

As I get older, I’m also really finding myself less tolerant of people who believe that because the word “lesbian” didn’t exist, people could not be presumed to be lesbian. (Much as if Indigenous people needed colonizers to name their country before they had an identity. Which, yes, I know colonizers and white supremacists believe.) There have always been words to describe women who, when they look for romantic or sexual partnership, look to their own sex. There have always been words that queer people used for themselves, as well as those that have been used about us. The premise that because the word “lesbian” did not exist means that no lesbian relationships existed before the word is…well, it deserves to be ridiculed. Regardless of the words used, I guarantee that women fell in love and lust with other women before the 20th century.

And so we come to Gentleman Jack.

Gentleman Jack is a fictionalized story based upon the real diaries of a real 19th century English lesbian, Anne Lister. Actual passages from her diary are used in this show, in which the characters are won’t to break the 4th wall and address us in their actual, historically accurate words.

This HBO/BBC production is lovely, and painful and honest and often rather funny. Written and directed by Sally Wainwright, my wife and I are finding it to be compelling watching right now. Wonderfully acted by Suranne Jones, Anne is not all that likable, until she is…and she often is. Funny, snarky and scheming, hyperactive and overachieving, Anne Lister is someone who would be exhausting to be around, but amazing to watching from a distance. Anne’s relationship with the emotionally fragile Ann Walker can be tiresome, but I’m all in for watching this story take us into a second season.

The setting, the clothes, the facts of life in 19th century West Yorkshire are all impeccably researched and presented. Shibden Hall itself is a fantastic member of the cast. Anne’s relationship to the people around is presented as accurately as possible, with interpretation coming in the form of tone of voice, body language, expression, all of which feel real. The music is another cast member, “almost like her companion” as my wife describes it.

As an insight to one lesbian’s life, Gentleman Jack is a terrific story, but since our job today is to understand history and the context of the day we find ourselves in, it’s worth remembering that Anne Lister was not the only well-known 18th century lesbian in the UK. The Ladies of Llangollen were contemporary, preceding Anne in society as lesbians. They apparently knew each other and Anne visited Plas Newyd at least once (as have I, for what it is worth.)

I actually like that the sex scenes are not explicit or extended, but are not coy or childish either. The strongest bits of the narrative, in my opinion, are Anne talking about her gender presentation and sexuality with honesty, a little pain and a lot of self-awareness. These scenes are largely taken from her own words, which give them power and resonance.

Ratings:

Acting – 10
Cinematography – 8, but there have been some controversies.
Story – 9
Lesbian – 10

Overall – 9

Much of Anne’s voluminous diaries remains untranslated, but there are number of abridged editions available, including Gentleman Jack: The Real Anne Lister, by Anne Choma, the historical advisor for the series and a woman who is still transcribing the diaries. Also worth looking into is The Secret Diaries of Anne Lister, a 2010 BBC movie.



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – June 8, 2019

June 8th, 2019

100 Years of Yuri

I hope I’ll see you at 12:30 today at AnimeNEXT in Atlantic City for the 100 Years of Yuri! I’ll only be there for the panel, but I’ll have a great wopping box of things to give away for good questions!

And if you can’t make it, be sure to take a look at Anime Feminist, on which I ask a question that we don’t often occasion to ask…Is Yuri Queer? I get some Yuri mangaka to weigh in on this as part of their Pride month articles.

And, as part of this series, definite check out Alex Henderson’s look at Bloom Into You on Anime Feminist in Not “Just a Phase”: How Bloom Into You challenges common yuri tropes. (It would also be easy enough to also note how it doesn’t challenge the tropes,  but the perspective is valid and excellent, as always. ^_^)

 

Yuri Manga

Via YNN Correspondent  Alice D., French-language “manga” Hana no Breath: Scent of Flowers by Caly is available in English on RightStuf. You can find the French language edition out from H2T.

Yen Press’s Yuri Life hits shelves in mid-July. If you’re looking for a slice-of-life manga about two adult women in love, this is the  book for you!

Also hitting shelves in in July is Miman’s Yuri is My Job!, Volume 4.

MURCIÉLAGO, Volume 10 is available in English, while Katakura Ako’s Hiru Shitagari, Mata, Volume 2 (昼下がりに、また) is now available in Japanese.

DMP’s Lilyka imprint of Yuri doujinshi has released Boat of Reeds, “A high school girl struggles with the loss of her parents, and is on the verge of just letting it all go. Her friend is puzzled by her strange question at first, but soon realizes the pain she is in…”

Galette, No. 10 (ガレット ) is also now available in print and digital (on Amazon JP and Amazon.)

Via YNN Correspondent Ash, Mag Comic’s Pixiv vehicle, Magxiv is offering School Zone, (スクールゾーン), a “devilish” Yuri gag comic.

 

Yuri Anime

Diskotek is putting out the New Cutey Honey OVA on Blu-Ray. Now if we can get Re: Cutey Honey, I’ll be happy. ^_^

 

Yuri Events

Via James W, Comic Horizon 7 is Yuri doujinshi event being held in October in Taiwan. How cool!

 

Yuri Photographer

You can now stay on top of  Yuri photographer Takahashi Minori’s (whose work is featrured in every issue of Galette and in the Yuriten exhibit),  photos which can be seen on this dedicated Twitter account.  Her work is not salacious, but it is intimate. I quite like it.

 

Yuri Live Action

I was a bit surprised when I was followed on Twitter by Happy Days a “Yuri Short Drama” on Youtube. These short films follow two women who live together. They eat candy, they argue about dirty clothes on the floor. It’s pretty low budget, but well-acted and kinda sweet.

 

Do you have questions about Yuri? Write in and ask and I’ll do my best to address them on the Okazu YNN Podcast, Become a YNN Correspondent by reporting any Yuri-related news with your name and an email I can reply to!

Thanks to all of you – you make this a great Yuri Network!



The Legend of Korra: Ruins of the Empire, Part One

June 7th, 2019

Legend of Korra: Ruins of the Empire, Part One is the beginning of the new three-part comic series following Avatar Korra and her friends, allies and enemies. Many thanks to Okazu Superhero Eric P. for sponsorship of today’s review!

This time, the story begins just before the Earth Kingdom holds a democratic election, as a new general seeks to re-establish martial law and with it, the Empire. General Guan has the martial might and probably the force of personality needed to make him a real threat, but he’s also secretly brainwashing people, which will clearly give him an unfair advantage in the election.

Korra decides to vist former Earth Empire general Kuvira and gain her insight on this situation. The team is uncomfortable with this  decision, but when Korra allows Kuvira to leave her prison to help fight Guan, tensions run pretty high. Asami is not quiet about her lack of trust and unwillingness to be anywhere near the woman who killed her father.

Vivian Ng’s and Michelle Wong’s illustrations are solid, and the writing is now much like stepping into comfortable shoes. We know the people, we don’t need any of the “oh, hey, let’s deal with this thing over here” that we had to in Turf Wars. Korra and Aasmi’s relationship is stable, even if their perspectives are in opposition. That said, there is care taken to remind the reader that they are a couple. Just in case you didn’t get the memo. So while I would not say that this is a “LGBTQ” comic, it is a solid adventure comic (as well as a equally solid “Politics 101: Why People Suck” for tweens ^_^) comic that includes a stable lesbian couple.

Like the previous series, things move pretty fast in this short graphic novel. Whether, ultimately, Kuvira can be trusted is still up in the air. I’m hoping that she will be written as nuanced and complex as she was in the cartoon. For my money, one of the things LoK did best was the portrayal of the adult women as fully developed humans. I’m hoping we’ll see Kuvira in that light, once again. Some of her history is briefly surfaced, so that’s good.

If you’re looking for a YA graphic novel for a kid who likes to think, one that checks multiple boxes on diversity (although there is still room to expand in this regard), has male and female characters who are given the space they need to be seen as whole, and is an good entree into understanding politics and human society as we experience it in real-time, this is a great bet.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 9
Characters – 9
Service – 0
Yuri – 10 In this case, because Asami and Korra just are, together, not because of any grand coming out.

Overall – A very solid 9

The book itself has no ratings or age limits of any kind, which puts it by default into All-Ages. And it’s currently #1 in Amazon’s LGBT Graphic Novels category, to which I say, “Happy Pride Month, Korra and Asami, welcome to the family.”