Dex-chan lover
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2018
- Messages
- 2,100
@Pokari
It's not like we're talking about some podunk manga that no one cares about. YuruYuri is basically one of the flagships of the "girls love" genre and a hugely visible series even outside of it. And, again, it's the exact thing you point to as being a problem with being tagged as shoujo-ai because it's pure subtext. And if that fucking manga is tagged as it, pack it up and forget the rest - it's de facto law now because it's not being actively enforced.
Had I cited some bullshit obscure manga, you'd have a point. But when it's one of the most popular and well-known girls love series and it's THE prime example of what you claim is improper tagging... Eh, no. It's kinda steering into valid use then.
And I remember editing wars over tags there. And some series even here on MD have warnings "don't fuck with the tags" for precisely this reason.
And you'd likely have people complaining about the tagging in the comments like how I see regularly now until someone put it back in. Again, we're not talking about some bullshit obscure series here.
Confirmation bias. YuruYuri is also a series that's been running for 11 years, has 17 volumes, had multiple anime seasons and was basically formed out of the gate as a SoL S kankei series. Nettaigyo wa Yuki ni Kogareru is only 2 years old, has 6 volumes (owing mostly to individual chapter length) and is no where near as widely known as YuruYuri. Some readers read into the relationships more than is shown or mistake comedic romantic entanglements that are only set up for a joke as the real deal. Realistically, Nettaigyo wa Yuki ni Kogareru compares with YuruYuri for the most part on implied relationship interest between girls. And it doesn't help that in YuruYuri that often this is done for comedy so it can be pushed off as "just kidding."
Uh, no.
Especially because any romantic plot advances are almost always played off for comedic effect or have no real follow-thru. It's not meant to. So, yeah, if you're thinking wishfully or you're dense and take the comedic bits of hinted romance to be real and you get on mangaupdates and vote for it... Doesn't make it so. The fact that we have 17 volumes of the fucking series and to the best of my knowledge none of the girls are in an actual relationship and there's no sign of that happening... Eh... Color me skeptical, but the fact that it was a comedic SoL take on the subject and it's gone on this long with nothing happening suggests to me that there's no smoke and there sure as fuck isn't any fire.
That's just from the first 6 chapters. I know the "girls being real friendly with another another" bit has a lot of leeway, but I don't think even really close female friends tend to nervously take sneak shots of one another while the other is sleeping and are embarrassed about it. Especially in Japan, where personal space is highly respected and you're supposed to even ask for permission to take photos of cosplayers that are publicly displaying their cosplay at events.
I dunno. You better have a good argument how this is not potential S kankei/girls love at the very least. Just because they aren't confessing or swapping spit with one another doesn't make it any less of girls love undertones/shoujo-ai content. More than other series that have done less and gotten away with it, in fact.
...It's interesting that you responded to my comment with claims of sophistry... with sophistic arguments.
Let's look at the definition of "subtext" in this context:
"an underlying and often distinct theme in a piece of writing or conversation."
...I'm really looking forward to the explanation of how this some-fucking-how is not important or valid when talking about a genre that deals with thematic elements of girls being attracted to one another. It is not required for one of the girls to explicitly state that they are in love for it to be shoujo-ai (after all, people can be in love and not be self-aware of this... kinda bizarre, that, almost like it's as if viewing it from... "perspective" lens where we as the reader can be aware of something about the characters that they themselves aren't realizing yet). It isn't required that the girls confess to be shoujo-ai. Nor is it required that they actually be in a relationship. We're talking about a genre that focuses on girls having crushes or being attracted, in some fashion, to other girls, that's the theme of the genre. So when we see UNDERLYING THEMES of that in the form subtext... Well, it doesn't seem like a stretch for me to say that it fits the theme and it has potential to go from there enough so to tag it for now.
Then going by this logic, we should never allow those tags that deal with interpersonal relationships to be applied until the manga is done because you have no way of know whether or not anything fucking becomes of something until it's over.
I mean, plenty of people viewed School Days (and later regretted it) and probably through "oh, a harem is possible" until a certain boat ride that was so abrupt it became a fucking meme.
That was known from the beginning, however. And it's not like there isn't a precedence for this. Google anime/manga "pilgrimages" in Japan. For instance, do you think the myriad of places in and about Chiba City were upset about being associated with brother and sister incest of the highest order of degeneracy because Oreimo took many key places from them? Fuck no! They plastered posters and shit all over the place to cash in on it.
Don't believe me?
Here's a shot from the Oreimo anime:
...And here's the Chiba Urban monorail:
TOOT TOOT, ALL ABOARD THE INCEST EXPRESS.
It gets more interesting, however.
This is a still image from the Oreimo anime where many of the characters go to school, "Chiba Benten High School":
...and here's an interesting picture from real life of the real, functioning school "Chiba Prefecture Commercial High School":
But maybe you're right. Maybe that school and club in this case would be, for some reason, completely irate and furious over a manga where the mangaka stopped by the club, learned from the kids there and incorporated a lot of that into the manga. Let's look at how the local municipality and school is handling the situation:
https://twitter.com/AMW_senden/status/1161171950892306433 - (Oh, hey, students/the school/the club in question... doing... an... official display of the manga...)
https://twitter.com/AMW_senden/status/1161171684486832128
https://twitter.com/TripSan/status/1161205422528663553
https://twitter.com/93choco/status/1163454169010692098
https://twitter.com/93choco/status/1163452989392093184
https://twitter.com/93choco/status/1161145432350658560
https://twitter.com/tv58xXw3t1ZLni7/status/1161138310317666311
...I... Uh... Um... I think they're just fine with it. In fact, more than fine.
First off, let it be said, before we go further—a lot of the manga on mangadex are improperly tagged. The older entries are mostly okay, but ever since MD decided to severely restrict who could edit the tags (a pool of people which to my knowlege has effectively been shrinking over time even as the site grows), with surprising frequency the tags are blatantly and obviously wrong now and no one gets around to fixing them.
It's not like we're talking about some podunk manga that no one cares about. YuruYuri is basically one of the flagships of the "girls love" genre and a hugely visible series even outside of it. And, again, it's the exact thing you point to as being a problem with being tagged as shoujo-ai because it's pure subtext. And if that fucking manga is tagged as it, pack it up and forget the rest - it's de facto law now because it's not being actively enforced.
Had I cited some bullshit obscure manga, you'd have a point. But when it's one of the most popular and well-known girls love series and it's THE prime example of what you claim is improper tagging... Eh, no. It's kinda steering into valid use then.
This has extra-noticable repercussions for stuff where there's some disagreement among the fanbase as to what the tag means (exacerbated by mangadex not bothering to make it easy to find official statements on all the tag-meanings themselves). Back on Batoto, the "shoujo-ai" and "yuri" tags were broadly crowdsourced into the "correct" (for these sites) meanings since everyone could edit...
And I remember editing wars over tags there. And some series even here on MD have warnings "don't fuck with the tags" for precisely this reason.
Not so on MangaDex. If someone changes the tags in either direction on MD, they tend to stay that way for a while. (Heck, I could probably "prove" this right now by removing the tag now and demonstrating that it will stay gone some time and indeed possibly not come back at all. It wouldn't be the most scientific of tests, of course, but that would be my expectation based on previous/recent experience. But that would not be very proper of me, I feel.)
And you'd likely have people complaining about the tagging in the comments like how I see regularly now until someone put it back in. Again, we're not talking about some bullshit obscure series here.
I've never read YuruYuri so I can't say for sure, but FWIW the fans on MangaUpdates gives that one the "Subtle Romance" category-tag, contrasted with this one's "GL Subtext" tag
Confirmation bias. YuruYuri is also a series that's been running for 11 years, has 17 volumes, had multiple anime seasons and was basically formed out of the gate as a SoL S kankei series. Nettaigyo wa Yuki ni Kogareru is only 2 years old, has 6 volumes (owing mostly to individual chapter length) and is no where near as widely known as YuruYuri. Some readers read into the relationships more than is shown or mistake comedic romantic entanglements that are only set up for a joke as the real deal. Realistically, Nettaigyo wa Yuki ni Kogareru compares with YuruYuri for the most part on implied relationship interest between girls. And it doesn't help that in YuruYuri that often this is done for comedy so it can be pushed off as "just kidding."
I can't speak more than that, but the broad perception of the fanbase appears to be that YuruYuri actually does have romance. Without getting in to whether or not that's correct, which I have no opinion on, I presume the tag is based upon that premise.
Uh, no.
Especially because any romantic plot advances are almost always played off for comedic effect or have no real follow-thru. It's not meant to. So, yeah, if you're thinking wishfully or you're dense and take the comedic bits of hinted romance to be real and you get on mangaupdates and vote for it... Doesn't make it so. The fact that we have 17 volumes of the fucking series and to the best of my knowledge none of the girls are in an actual relationship and there's no sign of that happening... Eh... Color me skeptical, but the fact that it was a comedic SoL take on the subject and it's gone on this long with nothing happening suggests to me that there's no smoke and there sure as fuck isn't any fire.
As was adding it in the first place! A bit of a chicken-and-egg problem here. This is, however, the reason why I have not yet taken it upon myself to remove the tag, personally.
I dunno. You better have a good argument how this is not potential S kankei/girls love at the very least. Just because they aren't confessing or swapping spit with one another doesn't make it any less of girls love undertones/shoujo-ai content. More than other series that have done less and gotten away with it, in fact.
Begging your pardon, but this seems like pure sophistry to me—stories are written from a given perspective, and we're allowed to use a character's internal monologue and the like in determining genre. The fact that a character "could potentially be" thinking something on the other hand, means nothing to genre.
...It's interesting that you responded to my comment with claims of sophistry... with sophistic arguments.
Let's look at the definition of "subtext" in this context:
"an underlying and often distinct theme in a piece of writing or conversation."
...I'm really looking forward to the explanation of how this some-fucking-how is not important or valid when talking about a genre that deals with thematic elements of girls being attracted to one another. It is not required for one of the girls to explicitly state that they are in love for it to be shoujo-ai (after all, people can be in love and not be self-aware of this... kinda bizarre, that, almost like it's as if viewing it from... "perspective" lens where we as the reader can be aware of something about the characters that they themselves aren't realizing yet). It isn't required that the girls confess to be shoujo-ai. Nor is it required that they actually be in a relationship. We're talking about a genre that focuses on girls having crushes or being attracted, in some fashion, to other girls, that's the theme of the genre. So when we see UNDERLYING THEMES of that in the form subtext... Well, it doesn't seem like a stretch for me to say that it fits the theme and it has potential to go from there enough so to tag it for now.
Anyway, I meant it when I said "at the bare minimum" a potentially unrequited love is required: At that point it pretty much has to be one of the primary focuses of the work; just like a regular "romance" tag gets applied to shoujo stories of failed romance, and also to action manga that have romance on the side, but not to an action manga where one character happens to like another but nothing comes of it.
Then going by this logic, we should never allow those tags that deal with interpersonal relationships to be applied until the manga is done because you have no way of know whether or not anything fucking becomes of something until it's over.
I mean, plenty of people viewed School Days (and later regretted it) and probably through "oh, a harem is possible" until a certain boat ride that was so abrupt it became a fucking meme.
I honestly personally didn't suspect anything was amiss with the tags until we got the author's notes saying this was based (with permission) on an actual school's club. (And, well, chances of a club wanting to be known as "that club with the lesbian manga based on it," are low. Not zero, of course, but still.)
That was known from the beginning, however. And it's not like there isn't a precedence for this. Google anime/manga "pilgrimages" in Japan. For instance, do you think the myriad of places in and about Chiba City were upset about being associated with brother and sister incest of the highest order of degeneracy because Oreimo took many key places from them? Fuck no! They plastered posters and shit all over the place to cash in on it.
Don't believe me?
Here's a shot from the Oreimo anime:
...And here's the Chiba Urban monorail:
It gets more interesting, however.
This is a still image from the Oreimo anime where many of the characters go to school, "Chiba Benten High School":
But maybe you're right. Maybe that school and club in this case would be, for some reason, completely irate and furious over a manga where the mangaka stopped by the club, learned from the kids there and incorporated a lot of that into the manga. Let's look at how the local municipality and school is handling the situation:
https://twitter.com/AMW_senden/status/1161171950892306433 - (Oh, hey, students/the school/the club in question... doing... an... official display of the manga...)
https://twitter.com/AMW_senden/status/1161171684486832128
https://twitter.com/TripSan/status/1161205422528663553
https://twitter.com/93choco/status/1163454169010692098
https://twitter.com/93choco/status/1163452989392093184
https://twitter.com/93choco/status/1161145432350658560
https://twitter.com/tv58xXw3t1ZLni7/status/1161138310317666311
...I... Uh... Um... I think they're just fine with it. In fact, more than fine.