- Joined
- Nov 29, 2020
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- 1
This is clearly a story about coming to terms with being trans how are yall missing this (also read his .5 afterwords)
Same here, not knowing what his main issue is, being gay or using the girl he loves because she uses him or what the hell...Same, feels like this series is just going on without focus besides having the same drama that is just repetition at this point.
Honestly, not really. I get what the author tries to show I guess, but I think they didn't do a good job through the first half or so to set it up.Chapter 29.5 will give you some answers about it
He never painted war crimes.Bob Ross turning in his grave. This is not the joy of painting.
It definitely gets foggy sometimes, I agree. But I think what the author is trying to do is really tied up in like how we define gender. Men are supposed to be strong and sexually active, while women are supposed to be objects of desire that men inact their sexual prowess on. It's two-fold. Mitani wants to be this sexual object, but feels like she isn't because Kei, who is assumably gay, did not return her affections. So she uses Yohei to validate her feminity through sex; all she has over Kei, as she alludes to in one chapter, is her body, and sex; she sees herself as unable to foster the same kind of meaningful connection Kei and Yohei shared as children. As for Yo, we see Mitani constantly policing and trying to enforce his masculine sexuality- she says things like "oh boys will be boys" in an earlier chapter, talking about Yo's desires, and even says that he should "want it," what more can he want from her? in the previous chapter. Yohei is not at ease with this expression of masculinity, and so he feels like "if this is the only way I can be a man, then I do not want to do that." This is basically what Kei says about why he dresses like a woman now- that he didn't want to be a man, but there's not really an option for him to express his gender outside of feminity, so he dresses and tries to behave like a woman. That struggle is the same one I think Yohei is facing, where he sees his sexuality as directly tied to "being a man," and so for him, the way to stop being a man is to repress/remove the symbolic representation of that masculinity- his penis.Honestly, not really. I get what the author tries to show I guess, but I think they didn't do a good job through the first half or so to set it up.
For most of the story, it reads as Yo is in love with Mitani, but then Kei comes back, he is also attracted to him and is confused about his own sexuality. But suddenly, in those latest chapters, he hates the whole concept of physical attraction and tries to cut off his p*nis.
Is that supposed to show that his confusion is not about his sexuality, but gender? Or both? Then what's the point of this talk about going back to "purity", with a lack of physical attraction and/or gender separation: that seems kinda touching on asexuality maybe? But nowhere before was it hinted that Yo is asexual, quite the opposite.
So yeah, I still don't really get what are Yo's issues exactly. I'll just read until the end and see if it starts making more sense I suppose, but for now, it's like rambling with no clear structure, to be honest. The fact you basically have to go into the afterword to even understand what the author is trying to convey is a big no-no to me. Or maybe I'm just too separated from the issue and people closer to it can relate? 🤷♂️
I think what Oshimi is getting to in this manga is an idea he's been attempting over and over and over and over again with almost all of his manga: a rejection of "masculinity".Honestly, not really. I get what the author tries to show I guess, but I think they didn't do a good job through the first half or so to set it up.
For most of the story, it reads as Yo is in love with Mitani, but then Kei comes back, he is also attracted to him and is confused about his own sexuality. But suddenly, in those latest chapters, he hates the whole concept of physical attraction and tries to cut off his p*nis.
Is that supposed to show that his confusion is not about his sexuality, but gender? Or both? Then what's the point of this talk about going back to "purity", with a lack of physical attraction and/or gender separation: that seems kinda touching on asexuality maybe? But nowhere before was it hinted that Yo is asexual, quite the opposite.
So yeah, I still don't really get what are Yo's issues exactly. I'll just read until the end and see if it starts making more sense I suppose, but for now, it's like rambling with no clear structure, to be honest. The fact you basically have to go into the afterword to even understand what the author is trying to convey is a big no-no to me. Or maybe I'm just too separated from the issue and people closer to it can relate? 🤷♂️
Ch 16.89PLEASE MAKE MY BODY CLEAN AGAIN