light novels
Jun. 26th, 2008 08:10 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
"The light novel is often a novelization of a manga or anime story, but completely separate stories appearing in no other format are common as well. The popularity in Japan is no surprise, if you think about it. Die-hard fans of popular series will read just about anything that includes their favorite characters, but despite the fact that light novels usually have a handful of illustrations, the fact it is prose means the readers use their imagination when thinking about how the story unfolds." (emphasis mine)
Thank the lord the children are finally moving away from those trashy comic books intopicture books real books. You know they're good because they have fewer pictures and more words. Pictures bad! Words good!
Man, I never thought I'd see the day when people extolling the virtues of reading and prose would make me want to smack them with shovels. I guess it's a context thing.
Thank the lord the children are finally moving away from those trashy comic books into
Man, I never thought I'd see the day when people extolling the virtues of reading and prose would make me want to smack them with shovels. I guess it's a context thing.
no subject
on 2008-07-05 04:25 pm (UTC)It's important to remember that manga (and indeed the media in general) is not a feminist vehicle. A manga does not have to win feminist approval to be valid and important, just as a woman who is raped and decides to continue a relationship with that person deserves neither vilification nor disdain. An individual's reaction to rape is so personal, I don't think it's for us to judge whether or not a mangaka's 'morals' should be called into question if she decides to paint her heroine as less than feminist for responding in a certain way. We don't live in a feminist world, not all women think in a feminist way, and women who have been raped may well be convinced of true love behind the act, blaming herself and certain it won't happen again, or determined to work through it on her own without affecting the people around her. That's life.
If rape scenarios were just presented in greater variety, and the responses of the characters were examined more thoroughly, rather than the self-serving manner romance shoujo often use to dismiss long-term emotional consequences, then I would find it hard to view the rape in shoujo as a trend rather than simply as subject matter, along with romance, friendships, betrayals and loss. Rape happens, and it should be acknowledged, but it could definitely be treated with more weight and insight than is presently the case.