NYCC Panels: From the Other Side of the Table, Part 2: CBLDF – Defending Manga

October 18th, 2011

Anime News Network has covered this panel in some detail,  so I’m not going to repeat what they said. For background of what the CBLDF does, how they came to be in existence, and how they are involved in the current Canadian Border case, please read the ANN article. Crystalynn did a great job in covering it.

I am a comics collector since, quite probably, before most of my readers were born. As a kid, there was that ever-present Comics Code Authority stamp on every comic I bought, signifying that a panel of censors had passed this comic as acceptable for me to read it. As an opener for the panel, Charles discussed how the CCA was a response by the industry to allegations of comics “harming youth” (does that sound familiar? Bill 156 was passed for the same reason.) As a child I was also subjected to stories of some kid, somewhere, throwing themselves off a roof, thinking they were Superman, and how, obviously, comics were bad for kids. My Dad was a comics reader, so there was never an assumption of the innate harm reading a comic could inflict on me in my household – but there were in others. I knew plenty of kids whose parents would not let them read a comic book, because comics make kids crazy or violent.

As I got older, Heavy Metal music was going to turn me into a Satanist, computer games would make me violent, etc. etc. As Charles pointed out, the persecution by adults of entertainment for children is pretty much a constant refrain. And now…manga is being targeted. Of course it is, because it’s popular among kids and their parents do not understand it. And, by extension our government, which is always the parental force for an adult life, also does not understand (and therefore, fears) manga.

The CCA was developed to protect publishers, CBLDF began to protect retailers who were targeted for selling comics. The battle, as Charles noted, has shifted to people purchasing manga – the readers. Us.

The CBLDF has a long, rich history with the creators of comics, but this new case brings them to new territory – the manga community. I am working with them to share resources and information in the manga community and hoping that we will all hang together, as Benjamin Franklin said, or we will assuredly hang separately.

Let me reiterate a few key points about the Brandon X case:

His personal electronics were searched. This is legal – both Border Patrol and TSA have the right – and imprimatur – to do this. (That this is legal is another issue, but one we should consider addressing with our government officials.)

2 comics were labeled as offensive.

He was detained and questioned and is now facing jail time.

That is what we know.

The content of the comics does not matter. This is something Charles repeated several times, and I agree with him completely. Comics are Art. Art is protected speech and comics are, and ought to be, a free form of expression.

Reading or drawing a comic is not a crime.

There are no “children” in comics. These are pictures. Not people. That was the point of my essay. A picture of a thing is not the thing itself.  If I draw myself robbing a bank, I have not actually robbed a bank – or even necessarily desired to do so. Fumi is not real. Yumi is not real. They are not “children,” any more than Clark Kent is an “adult.”

A thought is not a crime. If I do actually imagine myself robbing a bank, it is still not an actual crime.

We cannot and must not treat thoughts as crimes or punish them as crimes if we wish to live in a free society.

For those of us who read Yuri, this is not someone else’s problem. Hanjuku Joshi has adorable art. So does GIRL FRIENDS.  They also have situations that, should they be real-world depictions of things, might get you in trouble with a postmaster or a TSA agent. Think about it. However, they are not real depictions, they are lines on paper. No “children” exist in either. There is only Art there, and your imagination. Thoughts, words, images. All completely innocent and crime-free.

So, this weekend, I handed out stickers that looked like this:

And then I (and Melinda Beasi, Ed Sizemore, Richard Beaubien, Lissa Pattillo and CBLDF interns Lily and Michelle and lots of other folks who helped us this weekend! ) explained this case and why it’s so important to the manga community. Readers of manga and doujinshi are not publishers, not businesspeople. We are individuals who need to stand up for freedom of expression. That’s what the CBLDF is doing right now, for a single individual.

Don’t get afraid, get active. Please support the CBLDF, and please feel free to share this image and the story with your manga-reading friends. The more of us who stand up against this particular form of tyranny, the stronger we are.

Freedom of expression is something I will passionately defend to the end. I hope you’ll join me in this effort to protect ourselves from fear and ignorance. CBLDF is hoping to develop educational materials to assist us all in opening productive discussion with institutions that need training on the topic. When these materials are available, I will be sure to share them with you.

Thanks so very, very much to the CBLDF’s Charles Brownstein and Alex Cox for allowing me the opportunity to get involved in this issue and to all of you who attended the panel, asked good questions and got us all thinking about what we can do to help. Thanks also to Deb Aoki, whose comments were leavening and thoughtful.

My last word is this – when we are all old, can we just *not* bitch about kids’ entertainment being a harmful influence? That would be kind of refreshing, I think.



NYCC Panels: From the Other Side of the Table, Part 1 XX: The Women of Queer Comics

October 17th, 2011

This weekend, over 100,000 people attended New York Comic Con, mostly to get free stuff. But some of those people attended panels where free stuff wasn’t the draw and of those panels, I was privileged and honored to participate on two.

XX: Women of Queer Comics took place on Friday night. Sponsored by Prism Comics, the moderator was author, artist and singer (and Yuri Monogatari contributor) JD Glass. The panel consisted of:

Joan Hilty – Former DC editor and creator of Bitter Girl

Kris Dresden – Creator of these things matter, hush and other comics

Jennifer Camper – Creator of Rude Girls and Dangerous Women and editor of the Juicy Mother anthologies.

Paige Braddock – Creator of Jane’s World
 
Abby Denson – Creator of Dolltopia and Tough Love: High School Confidential
 
Rica Takashima – Creator of Tokyo Love ~ Rica ‘tte Kanji!? and Aozora Art

and, erm, me. (I love the picture above, because I was leaning back as I listened, so I’m not visible. ^_^;; I’m behind Abby.)

To say that I was feeling a bit like a pretender is an understatement. I was *the* only non-artist on the panel.

Anyway, the room was full, the panel was funny, the crowd was great and we had a teriffic time. I loved hearing the other panelists’ stories about how they got started doing comics and what motivated them now.

JD’s questions covered how everyone got started (short version: no one else was doing it and it seemed the right or only thing to do,) what keeps them going (short version: same as last answer and it’s who we are) and what positive changes we’ve seen (short version: more queer characters in all levels of comics, creators, editorial, staff, characters, etc.) This last led to the best line of the panel, IMHO.

I began talking about how, when I started, Yuri was just porn for creepy guys and Camper leans forward and says, “And now it’s porn for creepy dykes.” I’m still laughing at that.

Everyone was witty and grounded and real and I do not believe I have ever been so honored in my life as I was to sit up there with such amazing women.

The grand takeaway from this panel was: What are you waiting for? Do it – draw/write/publish – do it already and do it yourself.

Thanks JD for the chance to be on that panel – and thanks to everyone who came and asked such great questions!

PS – I gave out prizes to people who asked questions, so they got free stuff anyway. ^_^



Yuri Game: don’t take it personally, babe, it just ain’t your story, Guest Review by Mara)

October 14th, 2011

This is not so much a “Yuri Game” as a “Game with Yuri Elements” but that makes a clunky review header. Anyway, it is my very sincere pleasure to welcome back Guest Reviewer Mara, with another great game review!~ 

don’t take it personally, babe, it just ain’t your story is the newest game from creator Christine Love, who has also written Digital: A Love Story. The narrator is John, an arguably pathetic guy who is at least smart enough to be aware of it. John has just started teaching literature at a high school that has its own internal social network called Amie.

As a teacher, John is allowed access to his students’ profiles and messages, both public and private and is flat out told to monitor them at his discretion.  This is not just a plot element but worked into how we, as readers, experience the story. As the central narrative moves forward, all of the characters are messaging and posting in time with the main story, whether they are present in the scene or not.

Every time someone in the class posts, the player is alerted to it and can read the posts in a submenu. This gives the central characters a powerful sense of constant presence. Even if the main story leaves these characters behind; we still see them talking to each other and posting their status. This device was the selling point in the story for me as it really hammers home the fact that the main narration is just John’s incomplete view. By reading the students’ posts we are privy to their opinions on how the story unfolds, and we can see the gradual bubbling of incidents yet to happen.

It is through this mechanism that we learn of the first Yuri subplot in don’t take it personally. Two of John’s students, Kendall and Charlotte, have just broken up – apparently in a major way – and we see some of the residual fallout of this in the messaging that occurs right at the beginning of the game.  The online communication we see also highlights an important difference between Kendall and Charlotte. While Charlotte is pretty much the same in person as she is online (sensible, accepting and polite) Kendall is a loud witty troll online, but very subdued in person when John first meets her. It is only after the breakup story concludes that it becomes clear that Kendall’s perkiness begins to shift back into her offline persona.

One particular story route does deal with Kendall and Charlotte directly and the possibility of them getting back together. The result is something incredibly adorable in that teenage “this moment is the most important ever” sort of way. Although I did occasionally cringe at attempts to give the characters a unique voice; there was a sense of the raw emotional immediacy that seems to plague teenage life that felt truly genuine in how Kendall and Charlotte’s relationship played out.

However, Kendall and Charlotte are not the only Yuri draw in this game; there is another couple who, although they have much less exposure (John only meets one of them), were the couple that made the game for me. They are the mothers of Akira, another of John’s students, Ichigo and Hazuki.

Akira’s early story deals with him coming out to his friends and peers, having realised for himself very recently that he is gay. It is a sequence that is pretty much free of drama as everyone’s reply is ‘I already assumed so, ages ago’. This irritates Akira, as for him finding out he was gay was an important event and a powerful moment of self discovery…only to find that everyone else had already assumed it.

This is compounded for Akira, as his mother Hazuki by comparison, has a coming out story that spans a year with subplots, themes and a cast too big to fit on the stage. Although this and one other mention is all we get to know about Hazuki, we still get a solid flavour as to what her character is. That, and she induces intergenerational coming out envy in her son, which is just awesome.

We do get to meet Ichigo, in full mama-wolf mode during the end of a sequence where Akira is harassed by another character. Ichigo is straight to the point about the problem and refreshingly appropriate and direct. She also appears in the scene wearing a very dashing suit. I do have to say it is nice to see a mother turn up to protect her son and not be shown as a hysterical protective monster. Instead, Ichigo comes off as perfectly sensible especially, after she turns up again in the resolution of the main story to sort everything out and is instrumental in a very well-written big reveal.

don’t take it personally, babe, it just ain’t your story is a short visual novel. You can get through all the routes within a few hours. However, with both the offline and online world to read, it feels like a truly packed experience. The rhythm that builds up though each chapter allows the important points of each event to be easily digested, like lightly fried dumplings. The art is pleasant, although inconsistent, as two artists split the tasks, meaning that the art for the event cg and the profile pictures have a different feel than the sprites.

I am very willing to forgive this and indeed a few other flaws in don’t take it personally. Why? Well considering this was made for the most part by one person, who put it out for free, and I never felt for a moment that the effort put on this project dropped. don’t take it personally was easily more interesting and is more engaging than games I have bought for eight thousand yen (looking at you Yukkuri Panic and Koihime Musou.) To see such talent and effort available for free is truly humbling.

In conclusion, I seriously recommend this for two good reasons. It is entertaining and free. You cannot go wrong with that.

So:
Art – 6
Story – 6
Characters – 9
Yuri – 9
Yaoi- 9
Service – 6

Overall – 9 (Hey, big achievements mean a lot to me)

What are you still doing here? :  : Go and read the visual novels of Christine Love!

Erica here; Mara, thank you so much for bringing this game to our attention! (That’s the “we” of the Yuri Network, not the royal “We.”) ^_^

The game sounds like it’s fun and your review might even get me to try it. 

Just a quick note: There will be no YNN Report this week. I’m at New York Comic Con (Table 1158, Comic Book Legal Defense Fund!) and won’t have access to a keyboard and I’ll be damned if I try to write the YNN on a phone….



Yuri Manga: Oshioki! (おしおきっ!)

October 13th, 2011

Oshioki! (おしおきっ!) is a 4-koma manga that starts somewhere and ends up somewhere and in between goes totally off track three or four times.

Minato is an utterly average person. She gets average grades, comes up right in the middle of the pack in footraces and has not a single distinguishing characteristic. So when she sees smart, athletically inclined Student Council President Shion, she’s impressed, kinda crushy and a little jealous. Circumstances bring her into Shion’s acquaintance where she learns that Shion, when she wears her glasses, is a studious and polite young lady, but when she takes them off, becomes a schoolmarm sadist. To “punish” Minato for some small, meaningless infraction, Shion commands that Minato will be her dog. At which point Minato learns a life-changing lesson about herself…she is a masochist.

Oh, they never use that word, but we get it. ^_^

So Minato hangs around the Student Council, trying to stay close to Shion and trying, from time to time, to be punished. Hence the title.

Most of the strips are about average school-life details, but Minato has clearly begun to fall in love with Shion, and Shion’s obviously interested in Minato…but it takes a lot of stories about stolen puddings, and the school festival and the like to get through before suddenly, Council member Momoka pushes Shion to admit she has feelings for Minato and Minato to return the feelings…and they kiss…and the book ends.

Shion’s sadistic behavior is implied, not shown, Minato’s submissive tendencies are kept relatively socially acceptable and her humilation only shows up in dream sequences and once or twice as a gag. So it’s not like this is a high school BDSM fest or anything. Momoka and the other student council member Chitose fulfill specific roles and are not unlikable – and they genuinely like Minato and become her friend early on.

The best moment, IMHO, was towards the end, when Shion thanks Minato for all her help over the last few months, and asks her to officially join the Student Council. Minato is overjoyed, because she wants to be close to Shion, but also because she is no longer average. That was a sweet scene and pretty much the turning point of the book from silly gags to “getting Shion and Minato together.” The handwave kiss and happily-ever-after was a nice addition to the “Good” column.

Ratings:

Art – 4
Story – 7
Characters – 8
Yuri – 8
Loser FanBeing – 5

Overall – 7

Although the book wasn’t bad, I don’t know if I recommend it. Whether you will like it will greatly depend on how you feel about S&M and 4-koma as a comedic mix. I didn’t hate it.



Comic Book Legal Defense Fund’s Massive Manga Giveaway!

October 12th, 2011


Manga is not a crime! Right now an American citizen is facing a minimum sentence of one year in a Canadian prison because customs authorities wrongly allege that horror and fantasy manga on his computer are child pornography. The CBLDF is helping him by assisting in legal strategy and by raising money to offset his legal fees, which are expected to reach $150,000.

Join the effort to defend this case by visiting the CBLDF’s table in Manga Artists Alley and signing up for membership! When you do, we’ll enter you into our Massive Manga Giveaway!  Raffle tickets will also be available for purchase at the CBLDF table in the Exhibitor’s Hall.

The top publishers in the manga industry, including Viz, Seven Seas, Vertical, Yen, Dark Horse, DMP, Kodansha, and ALC Publishing have contributed prize packages for teen and adult readers for each day of the show. Come learn about the CBLDF’s efforts to protect your freedom to read manga, and take home amazing books!

Titles include: Tenjo Tenge Dance in the Vampire Bund, A Certain Scientific Railgun, Strawberry Panic! Complete Light Novel Collection Lychee Light Club, Chi’s Sweet HomeHigh School of the Dead Yotsuba! WORKS, Rica ‘tte Kanji!?, Yuri Monogatari, Volume 3,4,5,6, and selections from CLAMP