Nezchan posted:
It wouldn't surprise me if a lot of those attitudes of what a "real" trans person should be still prevail in various places, including Japan.
Oh, they most certainly do. I've seen it in manga before. I just personally see no reason to be mad at this manga in particular. At least regarding this topic anyway. The way it keeps implying trans ppl should just turn the other cheek is way more annoying to me than Akira being feminine.
One weird thing I notice in many trans related mangas, on this site at least, is that the trans woman ends up quitting her job almost as an expected part of transition, and goes to work in a gay bar or something instead. I assume that reflects some kind of weird cultural expectation.
It's a kind of very Japanese "don't stick out" expectation. If you're a trans (and even more so if you don't quite pass), you should dwell where people won't be shocked to come across you.
It's expected as a form of self-restraint to no disturb the harmony of the workplace. If you insisted to keep your desk-work near "normal" people, it would disturb the group.
I don't think it's specific to trans though. It's the same thing as being gay, being a loud foreigner, or being black. They make the group uncomfortable, so they become isolated and bullied in order to make them quit.
So except if the author wants to treat that aspect, they make their character avoid the predictable drama by making them join a place where they supposedly belong. "Giniro no Genders" did the exact same thing. The lesbian works at a gay bar. And if Gin is exposed as a cross-dresser, he probably will have to quit the university.
last edited at Apr 2, 2019 4:57PM