Well, if nothing else, the artist knows their way around breasts.How to show everyone that you've drawn hentai before without directly saying that you've drawn hentai before.![]()
Breasts are truly wonderful thingswhen they saw Isemi
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Lol, there were no metaphors in this chapter. It's a classic ecchi scene where girls are fascinated by other big breasts for "scientific reasons," lmao.the lesbian sex metaphor is unstoppable
I think they were referring to Otoha's words to Ririsa on the last page.Lol, there were no metaphors in this chapter. It's a classic ecchi scene where girls are fascinated by other big breasts for "scientific reasons," lmao.
I'd call it more of a homoerotic pun than a "metaphor," but okay.I think they were referring to Otoha's words to Ririsa on the last page.
I usually think of puns as one-off semantic-based incidents of humor. We've gotten a couple instances of Otoha declaring that "making music" with Ririsa is a pleasurable experience with language alluding to more sexual than musical themes.I'd call it more of a homoerotic pun than a "metaphor," but okay.
The problem is that a metaphor is something you intentionally make ambiguous for a subtle but clear purpose. For example, when you say someone "fucked your brains out," it's clear you're emotionally accusing someone of causing you mental harm. In this case, regardless of Otoha's ultimate intentions, we can't be sure whether this is an intentional pun or a quirk of her personality in general.I usually think of puns as one-off semantic-based incidents of humor. We've gotten a couple instances of Otoha declaring that "making music" with Ririsa is a pleasurable experience with language alluding to more sexual than musical themes.
Given the repeated remarks from Otoha specifically as it pertains to her desire to continue playing with Ririsa specifically, it sorta reads like a pervasive subtheme of the story, wherein subtle lesbian sexual tension is dressed up as musical vigor and excitement.
It's been a long time since I took any literary analysis courses though, so I currently do not possess the academic language or faculties to really explain what I mean in a way that might be more clear and/or convincing.
Oh, I also don't ship them or anything, because (as far as I'm aware) none of the characters are being set up for romance in this story.The problem is that a metaphor is something you intentionally make ambiguous for a subtle but clear purpose. For example, when you say someone "fucked your brains out," it's clear you're emotionally accusing someone of causing you mental harm. In this case, regardless of Otoha's ultimate intentions, we can't be sure whether this is an intentional pun or a quirk of her personality in general.
Characters who make even the most banal things sound overly horny through overly ambiguous language and jokes about it are nothing new, especially in titles like these. Again, regardless of her intentions, you're perfectly welcome to continue to ship them and/or read Otoha's behavior however you like, whether she's doing it consciously or subconsciously. It's more a question of tropes than of the situation as a whole.
So, do you think that without going into interpretation and subjective analysis, at the moment this is just a sexual subtext in the depiction of platonic activity and that’s it? Like in one sports title from the 10s, I don't know how it's evolved since then, where a beach volleyball partnership was explained and demonstrated to the viewer through a relationship metaphor?Oh, I also don't ship them or anything, because (as far as I'm aware) none of the characters are being set up for romance in this story.
We might not actually be opposed in our interpretation on what Otoha's doing here, the more I think on it.
basically, I don't see it as overt or subtle hinting at a yuri romance between them or anything, just that their making music together is layered over with sexual overtones, but it stops at that, and isn't intended to go any further or anywhere substantial in terms of their actual relationships.
Terminology and word choice might be the issue, more than the actual core analysis of the story and its themes & subtext.