Yuri Manga: Starlight Melody (スターライト メロディ)

May 11th, 2015

downloadDo you read a lot of books? More specifically, do you find yourself reading a lot of books in one genre? And do you hit a moment where you’re like, “Okay, I’m done”?

In the 1970s, I read tons of science fiction, because that is what my father read. One day, I was reading yet another “make-you-feel-creeped-out-and-horrible” Hugo Award winners short story collection and I just stopped reading sci-fi collections. I remember the specific story, although not the writer. I never read another short story until they made me do so in school. Then, in the early 80s, I read the science fiction story that broke me completely. I remember the author, but not the story title. But I do remember the story vividly. It was an excruciatingly dull set up for a single horrible pun.  I think I might have cursed, because I was a teen by then.

In the 1980s it was fantasy, and that lasted into the 2000s. I think I can place which books made me think “I have read every possible version of this story. Done now.” But there were a lot of similars that contributed to that.

In the 2000s, I moved to mysteries, especially lesbian mysteries. After reading every possible version of “lesbian detective with a tragic past” that could possibly be written, I moved on.

All of this is to say that the problem with Starlight Melody (スターライト メロディ) by Fuki is that every single story has been done so many times, that mere days after reading this collection, I can’t actually remember any of the content. It’s like reading Murder at the Nightwood Bar, written by someone new, with slightly different names, but the story is identical.

A few of the stories (I note, paging back through the volume to refresh my memory) are sweet. But there is little depth to be had in “best friends at school feel more than just friendship” over and over and over. I almost feel bad about it but, really, new Yuri writers? You can’t come up with a single new element at all?  Not even so much as not setting it in school? Don’t you get tired of writing/drawing the same story over and over? I know I could use a break from reading it.

There is nothing at all wrong with this volume. The art is clean, the characters sympathetic and they enact the same one or two versions of ‘Story A’ over and over.

There is a girl, she likes another girl. The other girl likes her. They like each other. The End.

Yawn.

Ratings:

Art – 8
Story – 5 Not a single unique element in the entire book.
Characters – 5 Same as above
Yuri – 5 There might be a kiss or two
Service – 2 The “service” is that nothing controversial or original will interrupt your bland schoolgirl love.

Overall – 5, and I am being kind.

I’m not about to give up reading Yuri, or anything, but count this as one of the similars that fills up a genre and sort of throttles it.



Event Report : Queer and Comics Conference

May 10th, 2015

queers-comics-logoThe Queer & Comics Conference was a truly historical event in every way.

I’m still processing a great deal of what I saw and heard.

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CUNY has one of those “neoclassical ponderous” fronts. It’s very intimidating.

Organized by artist Jennifer Camper and Prof. Andre’ Carrington of the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies (CLAGS) at The Graduate Center, CUNY, Queer & Comics is the very first conference fully sponsored by an academic institution to talk about queer comics.

As a conference, it was one of most wholly diverse things I have ever been a part of, with panels on trans experience, genderqueer/fluid stories, creators of color, stories of dis/ability, acknowledgement and honoring of the generations that have preceeded us. As an example of inclusivity that made everyone openly welcome this was absolutely a gold standard event.

YAI arrived on Day 1 for LGBTQ comics for Young Readers. This was, unsurprisingly, of great importance to me. The panelists were fantastic:  Zan Christensen of Northwest Press moderated, Jay Fuller (The Boy in Pink Earmuffs), Ariel Schrag (Awkward and Definition), Rica Takashima (Tokyo Love~ Rica ‘tte Kanji?!) Mariko Tamaki (This One Summer) Dan Parent (Archie Comics). The discussion was fascinating, covering the changes they’ve seen – and been part of, and the challenge of what it means to be writing “for YA,” what it means to be labeled a YA author, how one decides what to include or not include, influences and suggestions for further reading (some of which I have already exhorted you to read, such as Lumberjanes and Ms. Marvel)

I then went out to lunch with four amazing women – Rica Takashima, Mari Morimoto (who translates a great deal of the manga you read in English), Keiko Nishimura (a grad student in Communications at UNC, who, in another of those weird coincidences that reminds me of what a small world this is, was in there in 2004 when I introduced the Utena movie for the Lesbian and Gay Film Festival in London) and Fujimoto Yukari-sensei, a professor of shoujo manga at Meiji University, who was a fellow contributor for Eureka magazine’s “Yuri Culture” issue. Did I mention how small a world it is?

masterWe then went back to catch a “master class” with Howard Cruse and Alison Bechdel. I expect you’ll be familiar with Bechdel’s name, as she is one of the best known lesbian comic artists currently drawing, creator of Dykes to Watch Out For and Fun Home, but you may be less familiar with Howard Cruse, who is one of the first-wave LGBTQ comic artists in America, and founder of Gay Comix, the first ever gay comic in America. This talk was amazing, ranging from technical details (“What brushes did you use?” “Whatever I had.”) to discussions of coming out and life in the gay communities of the 70s and 80s and choices the artists made in the process of their defining works. It was both enlightening and endearing.

pioneer1That was followed up the one session I absolutely, positively, definitely wanted to see : Pioneers of Queer Women Comics, moderated by Samantha Meier, who is writing a book on this topic, featuring names I hope you all know or will learn: Trina Robbins, Mary Wings, Roberta Gregory, Lee Marrs.

 

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From Left to Right: Roberta Gregory, Trina Robbins, Samantha Meier, Jennifer Camper, Mary Wings, Lee Marrs

 

These amazing women talked about the challenges they faced in the underground comics world, contributing to Gay Comix, what they are doing now and in the future. It was a fantastic panel. I was able to shake their hands, and give them some of our ALC books, and have a great experience. What fantastic women. What an amazing chance to meet them and listen to them.

 

My Day 1 ended there and Day 2 started late for me.

20150508_124603I caught the last few minutes of This is What I Look Like: Creating Queer Characters of Color, Sina Shamsavari moderating, with panelists Carlo Quispe, Cristy C. Rhoad,  Rica Takshima, Jennifer Crute’, and Rupert Kinnard. (Thank you person who designed the program book, for including the panelists’ names on the schedule!! Thank you so much.) Event organizer Jennifer Camper came in at the end with an emotional and heartfelt thanks for the panelists, because when she first came up with the idea for this conference, this was the first panel she thought of and the entire event was about this moment for her.

 

Headed out to lunch with the same group, because lunch with amazing people is always the best part of an event. Fujimoto-sensei was heading up to TCAF after Queer & Comics and we talked a little bit about what makes TCAF special. I rendered it down to Q&C is about the stories that need to be told, where TCAF is about the love of comics in every form: the making of, the drawing, the publishing, the selling and the reading of comics.

lunch

Then it was time for the panel I was moderating – Wet and Sticky: Female Sexuality in Queer Comics. I had amazing panelists! Jennifer Camper, Ellen Forney, Jennifer Crute’, and Texta Queen. We talked about what we found hot and sexy, what inspired them – they had a fantastic conversation about the technical process of drawing sex scenes, the use of reference photos, and a lengthy discussion of objectification and whether it is a thing that is possible in regards to queer comics.  What a great set of panelists – I was so very lucky to have the honor of being a moderator for this.

I sat with a number of trans and genderqueer comics folks in between sessions and we had a lovely conversation about this event and their work, and cool gender neutral characters in manga. Quicky shoutouts to Sophie Labelle, and her comic Assigned Male, Alison Wilgus, and Kori Handwerker, who has been a Friend of Yuriko for ages. ^_^ So good to see you all.

20150508_191151We all went back to the auditorium once more to hear final thoughts from event founders Andre’ Carrington and Jennifer Camper.

Both of them discussed their vision for this event, which involves taking it on the road. They are hoping to shift this back and forth between the East and West Coasts, and Jennifer mentioned, in conversation, that she though it would be cool to maybe take it on the road to Europe.  (In case you were wondering, I missed the panel, but yes, LGBTQ Bande dessinée had a panel of its own, as did Bara, and webcomics and of course I brought up Yuri in Wet and Sticky.)

20150508_191518_001But you should also understand that this sort of thing is not just confined to this conference. There is a zeitgeist – second and third wavers are reaching out to have these conversations while the first wavers are still with us, as the new generation is discovering they are not alone through webcomics.

In the sales room (where Prism Comics was graciously handling sales for everyone) I met Soizick Jaffre, who is arranging LGBTQ comics talks in Europe, and Justin Hall, who is hoping to do similar things in San Francisco.

The final presentation was Alison Bechdel’s keynote. Of course she talked about the utter weirdness her life has become since the Fun Home musical, but before that she talked at length about Dykes to Watch Out For, and the constant tension in her between missing the sense of community of her youth and the desire to break away from being a niche community comic artist. She showed us a two-panel comic of two older folks discussing the new “Oppressed Minority to Watch Out For” comic in the paper then, jokingly wondered why her comic just never quite made it to that point, with this illustration.

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Eye-opening for me was the fact that, although I have always said I didn’t much care for Dykes to Watch Out For, I laughed hysterically at the strips she showed us, walking us through the comic year by year from inception to ending. Apparently, I am now mature enough to appreciate the humor, and think I’d better go back and read it after all. ^_^

The conference had several satellite events, a “drink and draw”, a reading by artists and a few other social get-togethers that ran before and after the main conference. Everyone who attended had nothing but nice things to say about the event. I certainly hope that CLAGS considered it successful – I’d love to make this a regular event in my schedule.

Before we wrap up, let me give you the rundown on the swag I picked up. ^_^

sinThe very first thing I nabbed was If This Be Sin by Hazel Newlevant, a former Prism Comics Queer Press Grant winner. All three of the stories were bittersweet, but for entirely different reasons. Two were historical –  the first of Gladys Bentley, a crossdresser and lesbian in 1920s Harlem, who went “straight”, married and lived…happily ever after? The second followed the “fictionalized” lives of two of Prince’s band – Lisa Colvin and Wendy Melvoin, watching as their contributions were minimized as his star rose. The final story was a fiction of ballroom dancing and what might have been.

howmuchqwI also had a chance to pick up How Much Queer Work! an anthology that includes Russian LGBTQ artists, as well as some familiar western names. The anthology was put out by the St. Petersburg-based Side by Side Film Festival, specifically to raise money for a Russian LGBTQ organization, in the wake of the re-criminalization of discussing any LGBTQ issues in Russia. This is no joke for Russian queer folks, who are seeing a massive uptick in violence and discrimination as a result of this “protective” legislation.

Queer-Pin-UpsIn an effort to throw a little more money at CLAGS and the event, I picked up the amazing, awesome and damn, I wish I could draw-inspiring Queer Pin-up Cards, published by Northwest Press, with art from pretty much every artist to be involved in this event! These are so damn cool. I found myself smiling at practically every single image.  I’m also (again) amazed and honored that I’ve gotten the chance to meet so many of these ridiculously talented people.

summerI’d been waffling for a year or two about getting Mariko and Jillian Tamaki’s Caldecott-award winning book, This One Summer. Not because I didn’t want it, but because I kept finding myself in situations where carrying it home would be work. I’m so damn lazy. ^_^; So, finally I had a bag with wheels and Mariko Tamaki had autographed it and I was bloody well going to buy the thing at last! I read it on the train home and it was, as I expected, totally compelling reading. Anyone who grows up anywhere knows this story, as one stops being a child, but is not yet an adult, but the concerns of the adult world start to be seen, but are still opaque.

wendelLast, but not least, I want to thank Denis Kitchen,  a founder of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, and a pioneer with Gay Comix, for making it possible for all panelists to get a copy of Howard Cruse’s The Complete Wendel. This is something I have been meaning to read for quite a long time; an important comic of the gay community of the 80s, when everything was changing. The free-wheeling community of the 70s was about to be hit…hard…with the reality of AIDS and coming out was becoming more critical than ever, but no easier. I’m looking forward to reading this immensely.

Thank you Andre’ and Jennifer for a fantastic conference!

I learned a lot at this event. About the artists, about stories I had never read, about myself. But I want to leave you all with what I consider to be the most important piece of wisdom I heard in these two days. Mary Wings said this and I echo her wholeheartedly:

“Don’t ever stop doing what you are doing. Keep on doing it.”



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – May 9, 2015

May 9th, 2015

YNN_MariKEvents

If you’re in the Toronto area, this weekend is the exceptional and always exciting Toronto Comic Arts Festival. Loads of manga and LGBTQ-friendly content and programming and admission to the event itself is free (some programming may have registration or costs associated, so check the program.)

June 6th will see a Yuru Yuri Field Day event in Japan in Hibiya.

I’ve got a lot to think about after Queer & Comics, but I hope to have a report for you tomorrow.

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Support Yuri News and Reviews –  Subscribe to Okazu withSubcribe with Patreon

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Other News

Tokyo Wrestling’s Yuki Keiser has put together an article for Time Out Tokyo of 10 LGBTQ-friendly places in Tokyo. I get this question from time to time and can’t really answer it, so I’m thrilled to have this article to point to. The article is in Japanese, but you can always look the names up on Google Maps (and use Google translate features to make your way through the article.)

I haven’t had a moment to watch any of it, but Wish Upon the Pleiades, the collaboration between Subaru car company and Gainax is streaming on Crunchyroll. It had, I thought, room for Yuri, but we’ll see when I finally watch it. ^_^

 

Yuri Webcomics

From YNN Correspondent Feifei W., a lovely little Chinese Yuri webcomic, 麻杆和大奶. Feifei commented that she loves the fact that it’s all portrayed as normal everyday life. Of course so do I. ^_^

YNN correspondent Celes R suggested this sweet tale of two lovers through their lives together by Pixiv user Tsubakin ◎の「セイ」, which she translates as “Born This Way.”

Yuri Manga

ANN Reports that the Puella Magi Madoka Magica: The Movie -Rebellion-, Vol. 1 manga has been pushed back to December.

If I recall correctly, and it’s been a long time, so I may not, somewhere tucked into Seven Seas’ new license Franken Fran, there’s some Yuri.

Yuricon Store

We are approaching the end of Phase 1 on the new Yuricon Store, in which I backfill all the Yuri from past years that is still available. It’s slow work (and full of decisions like “there’s 1 copy left of this on Amazon JP, do I bother listing it?) but we’re getting there!

If you want a quick bookmark or feed to check to see what we’ve recently added, thanks to our beloved and talented webmaster, Lissa Pattillo, you can now do that easily: http://www.yuricon.com/store/new/ is text only, but you’ll be able to see quickly what was added.

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!

 



Queer & Comics

May 8th, 2015

queers-comics-logoYesterday was Day 1 of the first-ever, totally historical event Queers & Comics. Sponsored by Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies (CLAGS) at The Graduate Center, CUNY, 365 Fifth Avenue, NYC, Day 2 has just begun!

If you can get over to CUNY for even one session, it’s absolutely worth it! I’ll be moderating Wet and Sticky: Female Sexuality in Queer Comics at 4:15 today in Room 201.

Full report as soon as I have a chance! See you there!



Sailor Moon Season 1 Part 1, Disk 1 (English)

May 7th, 2015

SM1P1LEWhen Sailor Moon first hit Cartoon Network, I found it entertaining in a way I hadn’t ever before experienced. Things…changed. The characters grew over time, they remembered what had happened last week and learned new things as the series went on. They got more powerful, and braver and more competent as the series progressed. The story wasn’t about just defeating the bad guys. We learned about the characters themselves, too – what they liked and didn’t like. They had complex relationships – sometimes the closest of friends, sometimes they’d be distant. It was something so amazing, so different from the animation I had grown up with, that I was hooked.

It was 1998. Seriously? I have been obsessing about this series for 17 years? Good heavens.

Pioneer originally released the series on VHS. We don’t have all of the VHS tapes because they were impossible to find in order, or as a set. You’d get one volume of episodes at Suncoast and thne search forever to find the next one, maybe discovering it at an anime con, or the bargain rack at The Wall. Or not, and you’d have that hole in your collection forever. When Pioneer put the set out on DVD, I scarfed them up. Cartoon Network had hacked and slashed the third season up in the weirdest possible way, making cross-dressing Haruka and her flirtatious possibly-girlfriend Michiru into a creepy pair of incestuous cousins, and we were thrilled beyond belief to have Sailor Moon S in its subtitled, uncut weirdness.

In 2014 we got the new Sailor Moon Crystal anime. Predictably, fandom spent more time being unhappy about it than glad. My favorite complaints are that the animation is bad and the faces are all the same. The complaint that we spend too little time with the characters is entirely valid. The season went from 40 episodes down to 13, mirroring the manga, which means the anime has both the strengths and the weaknesses of the the manga. We lost some character building time for the Senshi, that is true. We also lost many other things.Viz has put out a brand new master of the original Sailor Moon anime. I am rewatching every single episode, even the bad ones, and let me tell you, there are some stinkers in this thing.

Sailor Moon Season 1 Part 1, Disk 1 begins with the moment that clumsy, crybaby Tsukino Usagi meets a talking cat, Luna and learns that she is a Guardian of Love and Justice, Sailor Moon. She is also stalked by this creepy dude in a mask and tux, cleverly called Tuxedo Mask.

No one is going to beat me in my love for this series, but I have to be honest with you, episode 4 really bites. In fact, the first 7 episodes are probably my least favorite among all 200 and I am including all of “R” and “Super S” in that. Chibi-Usa kissing a unicorn sucks less that the episode where Usagi is worried about losing weight. If I could destroy that episode so no one ever had to see it again, I would, gladly. And truly, the animation is abominable. Remember, that no one at Toei knew whether this would fail and they pulled out no stops at all. The animation is bad even for its time. So when you complain that the animation is bad in Crystal, remember that Sailor Moon has a 20-year tradition of bad art. ^_^

And let’s talk about the writing for a second. In Crystal, because we don’t have monsters of the day, only enemies of the day, we don’t get lines like “Frilled-neck lizards, albino Mexican salamanders, and the human face fish are all mad!” I don’t know whether to call that a loss or a victory, ^_^

This all having been said, the one thing that made the series work for me starts up in Episode 8, with the addition of Mizuno Ami to the team. The rapport between the characters was always what made Sailor Moon work for me (although I admit to loving the monsters of the day for their inherent absurdity). When Ami first shows up, she looks lonely. That look will leave her face as time goes on, because one of the key points of anime is that you are stronger with friends. Seeing Ami smile was worth it. It’s always worth it.

Last, but not at all least, I have to commend Viz. The remastering is as good as anyone could have ever hoped and the translation not only is accurate, but includes cues to character voice, so that Usagi’s lines sound like a child, while Ami’s are a bit more mature. Top marks from me on that. (As an aside, when I began watch Crystal, I though that Mitsuishi Kotono-san was voicing Usagi a bit babyish, but the more I listen to the original, the more I think it fits. About episode 7 or 8, she starts sounding a bit more babyish, so clearly that was what they were going for.)

In general, the Viz edition is clean, simple and appealing. For folks who want fancier layouts, there are multiple versions, with physical and content extras. The more basic Limited Edition is available on Amazon and RightStuf through the Yuricon Shop.

It was both wonderful and excruciating revisiting this disk and I have no doubt that my feeelings will remain the same for the next two disks. Onward – more Senshi await.

Ratings:

Art – 6 tops
Story – 7 Still more plausible than Weiss Kreuz
Characters – 7, soon to climb
Yuri – 0
Service – 1 unless you count Tuxedo Mask and I don’t, but there is inevitable bathing.

Overall – 7, but watch it crescendo as we move forward.

Sincere and immense thanks to Viz Media for a review copy. It’s like visiting old friends (and remembering why you didn’t visit them any more. ^_^)