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Altair Uploader
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joined Nov 30, 2016

I just noticed that chapter 45 ("Let's not go out on purple days" part 2) is not there; it just goes from ch44 to vol.6 extras and then ch46 on the next volume. Curious.

It is on mangapark, if anyone needs a place to read it.

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

Re-read Teacher after this and remembered that it was never finished. :(

The other chapters are online... (on evil sites).

And on our blog! Which is debatably less evil. Just search 'dear my teacher' in the box there.

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

Leaving work at 7pm is normal!? Those 10-11 hour work days, ouch! At least they get paid overtime~

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

Did Stretch at some point have a Yuri tag?

Yes, for a number of the early chapters. It was a false hope.

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

You're bringing yuri to the masses. You're fighting the good fight.

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

Stretch is an interesting, and trickier, one. It was first serialized in a seinen manga, which doesn't preclude yuri but does explain the fan service. Then it moved to online only on Shou's site. So the demographic was limited to Shou's site traffic and, well, us on DS, kind of. We're more inadvertent though.
I think authorial intent might play in more because demographics and the market are dead ends (or just seinin) this time. Considering Shou's previous, and concurrent with Stretch, work in comic Lo, there's a lack of yuri all around. Though there is romance? It comes down to how intentional the imagined relationship between the pages is, which makes intent hard to find without some serious close reading. Shou knows how to yuri, but they don't seem to be doing it this time. A closer look at the ending will likely color the whole series by sucking the legitimacy out of a potential relationship, but I can't be sure without a rereading.

Well, does it follow established yuri patterns and meet the looser definition of an intense platonic relationship between women? I think that was one of Erica Freidman's definitions. One particularity tricky wrench in the system is that the backstory is set up like the archetypal yuri story of girl falls in love with girl who was in love with her the whole time.

I think that's where the ire against the story comes from. In yuri, those flashbacks of when they knew each other in school would imply the beginnings of romantic interest. In, say, yuri hime. Or, by a known yuri mangaka...

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

I've never quite seen the lesbianism + feminism relation, tbh. In my eyes, physical and emotional attraction to a certain gender seem to have very little to do with political and social values. If a woman is "attracted" to other women specifically because of "equal rights" or "the patriarchy", it sounds a bit like chuunibyou to me... =A=

You've never heard of Lesbian Separatism or Political Lesbianism? There's actually quite a long history of connection between feminism and lesbianism, but that's a bit off the direct topic of the definition of yuri so probably not worth getting into here.

Feminism is the theory, lesbianism is the practice.

Full response in the morning. For me how subversive or transgressive something is is directly related to it's effect on the world. It can be marquee de sade bizarre, but if three people of no consequence read it, it influences little and leads to no organizing, then it lacks said qualities. If it's published to a--let's say--woke audience, it's not subversive. If it's a high schooler's fanfic and hits a rural town of 300, it's probably maximally subversive.

Also, Nezzzzz, please email me, or I'll have to hit you up via an awkward transaction on my irl Twitter. Got a project in the works, need the right people. Altairediting@gmail.com

As for this thread's topic: a free for all.

last edited at Mar 24, 2017 2:12AM

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

Hmmm... I don't know if this is yuri or not.

After reading it, I just thought that it was a classic case of unintentional lady-killer swooning girls all over the place by acting like a prince/knight. With lots of blushing, lots of "I will protect you" and "swoooooon", but it will never go beyond a princess carry and a hug.

I'd call that "fake yuri", or "class S" yuri. A la Maria-sama, where it's implied that it's just a harmless youth thing. The setting of an all-girl school with a system of knighthood doesn't plead for real yuri.

And the heavy ecchi content, with panty-shots, naked boobs and molestation pleads for a hentai hungry male demographic target

I will believe it's yuri if the two MC girls ever kiss or acknowledge mutual romantic feelings (and not the side characters).

Maybe some people who read ahead can give more information.

It looks like it could be yuri, it smells like yuri, but as of now, I don't think it deserves the yuri tag.

I started to reply to this, but it got sort of out of hand. Here's my response: http://dynasty-scans.com/forum/topics/12005-the-great-debate-what-defines-yuri

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

I started writing a post that got kind of out of hand for the particular thread (Knight Tale, which I can't link because it triggers the spam filter), so I figured I'd turn it into its own. What defines yuri changes over the years as the genre evolves and publishers fade in and out, and we're basically the main place western yuri readers congregate, so it kind of makes sense to discuss what the hell this thing we read is all about. We have scattered discussions about in the threads and it occasionally shows up on /u/, but nothing fruitful ever comes of it.

Consider this a debate, an argument, or better, a conversation attempting to get to the bottom of how to classify yuri, what fits in the genre, and why. Can we include fanfics and shipfics? Do lesbians auto-equal yuri? Does country of origin matter? Is it a romance genre?

I typed it out on a tablet first, so please forgive any errors or lack of articulation. It also doesn't fit the conversation model as I'm a bit of a purist when it comes to yuri. This was a response to the problem of what does and doesn't constitute yuri, so I went with the most concrete approach that also happens to fit my favorite yuri. Coincidence?

Hmmm... I don't know if this is yuri or not.

After reading it, I just thought that it was a classic case of unintentional lady-killer swooning girls all over the place by acting like a prince/knight. With lots of blushing, lots of "I will protect you" and "swoooooon", but it will never go beyond a princess carry and a hug.

I'd call that "fake yuri", or "class S" yuri. A la Maria-sama, where it's implied that it's just a harmless youth thing. The setting of an all-girl school with a system of knighthood doesn't plead for real yuri.

And the heavy ecchi content, with panty-shots, naked boobs and molestation pleads for a hentai hungry male demographic target

I will believe it's yuri if the two MC girls ever kiss or acknowledge mutual romantic feelings (and not the side characters).

Maybe some people who read ahead can give more information.

It looks like it could be yuri, it smells like yuri, but as of now, I don't think it deserves the yuri

That's one way of going about defining yuri. But, I agree with Ano from Kindred Spirits when she says that holding hands is fine yuri. Personally, I feel if a story doesn't have a heavy dose of either drama, angst, or romance, then it's not yuri. But, that was the previous incarnation of yuri from the Tsubomi (and Lililicious!) days. The definition isn't static, with the only worthwhile metric being market forces. As a genre of writing, the literary (manga) market sets the definition via the major serials of the time (yuri hime, rakuen, hirari, etc.). Some definitive or influential works can occur outside the serials, but they're the exceptions rather than the rules. Ship fics, fan work, and non professional work all follow their lead.

For a simplified example, at this point, class S is a historical genre from a different period in yuri determined by an earlier Japanese culture. Those cultural forces aren't around anymore, so you can't have a new class S story. You can have a writer imitate it, a pastiche, the way someone can imitate modernist poetry, but it would not be considered Class S or modernist now.

Personally, I feel Galette will be setting the new tone for yuri as I've heard the current editor In chief of yuri hime may be straying.

This manga definitely has that male gaze, male demographic feel. I particularly agree that it was unnecessary and uncomfortable. But, we've had ecchi yuri and male written yuri before. In this case, the mangaka is probably playing to the editor or the serial. To see if it's yuri, we have to ask where it was originally serialized, where it was published, and if the mangaka was intentionally following established yuri patterns.

Dynasty's yuri tag does not, and should not, follow suite. The tags are in place so a reader can search for what they want to read or know what will be in the story. That particular tag needs to be very broad to have any utility to match reader needs.

Yuri, in the market definition, is also Japanese, and generally romantic. Outside of Japan, yuri often quickly equates to lesbians. Which is to say that if you have lesbians, you have yuri. This style operates almost entirely independently from the original market and should likely have a different classification. Particularly because, generally, yuri is not a subversive genre and operates almost independently of feminism/feminist criticism, queer criticism, and LGBT concerns/history, this breakdown and massive redefinition of the genre on a country by country or region by region basis outside of Japan presents a ton of classification problems.

For example, could Allison Bechdel's Fun Home be considered yuri? It would meet most non market based definitions. It's also a fucking masterpiece.

For me, the main draw to yuri is the romance. I love the cliche, intense emotion, and standard story lines. When you read pop fiction, you're there to get what you want and know, generally with slight variation. If I wanted something new, I would read something experimental like House of Leaves or Infinite Jest. Though, there are some phenomenal mangaka, like Takemiya Jin, that can wed genre conventions with authentic experience (Read the first chapter of Fragments of Love and watch how it intentionality shatters previous yuri conventions while introducing queer life with a mastery of the genre itself) (though morinaga and morishima say they're doing the same.), most manga that engages the LGBT community is outside of yuri like honey and honey, lesbian motherhood, that one, etc.

to;dr Empower yourself and read some damn feminist and queer theory.

last edited at Mar 23, 2017 12:58PM

Altair Uploader
Syrupy Love discussion 09 Mar 10:54
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

Poliz,

If you grabbed a woman's behind on a subway and she did not speak up or try to get away, is it suddenly okay? Is it not sexual assault? Does it mean she actually wants it because she isn't showing any signs of not wanting it?

Of course not. This is rape and it's portrayed as such. Jun, a perfect stranger to her, is shown as a predator sexually assaulting a clearly unwilling partner. She lured Misaki into her home knowing Misaki would respond to information about Tsubasa. There is no alternative reading here; the meaning is very clear. Believe it or not, the face on page 113 and the words "stop it" on 114 do in fact mean Misaki is unwilling.

Unwilling partners often cannot and do not fight back. This is an established fact of reality you deny only to yourself. Any decent, modern court would try these cases as some form of sexual assault.

Just in case this was unclear to other readers.

And, this thread is starting to get pretty far off topic. As someone who knows what's coming next, I'd like to just rev up the hype train and remind you that the ride isn't over yet. There's definitely been a lot of Snidely Whiplash anticipatory hand rubbing and "mwahahas" on my part as I waited for the comments each chapter.

Edit: Oriko, I believe I read too quickly through or misinterpreted your post in that case.

last edited at Mar 13, 2017 1:49PM

Altair Uploader
Two Spirals discussion 05 Mar 00:55
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

I kinda love how people's reactions to even slightly dramatic statements are at the I WILL EAT THIS POTATO CHIP level, and just escalate from there. It's like watching opera.

That's the intensity with which I try to live my life. Sans that level of police surveillance.

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

So these things have a sliding scale. There's Kurogane Ken level, where the older woman jumps the younger girl when she hits puberty, then nobly parts from her until she's about 18 or so. There's Kodomo no Jikan level, where the older guy waits until her 16th birthday and jumps her. There's Dear My Teacher level where even being 18 and graduated from high school is too embarrassing, let's give it another year. Maybe Asagi Ryu level where you try your luck with your middle-school niece but if she doesn't want to, you bide your time. Pure-water Adolescence where each year, or maybe month, you get a little closer without doing the deed. I wonder where this fits in that.

I left out Chatting at the Amber Tea-shop. You hold hands more romantically every 5 years or so. And Miss Sunflower - you have a crush on Miss Sunflower when you're in middle school, and you make progress just before she dies, 15 years later, and then you become the next Miss Sunflower, and the cycle repeats.

I forgot Aoi Hana level - you molest your 12-year-old cousin, manipulate her into falling in love with you, destroy her heart, and let everyone call her a crybaby. I guess I'd call that one the "what the hell, I'm going for it, morality what a concept" level.

This is brilliant; it needs a graphic.

last edited at Feb 22, 2017 11:12PM

Altair Uploader
Image Comments 11 Feb 23:21
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016
45080923_p0

But who is which star?

Altair Uploader
Syrupy Love discussion 15 Jan 23:43
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

Second chapter was much better than the first. As a long-time fan of Gyuunyuu Linda's earlier works, I'm interested to see more of this serial. Thank you, ZdY.

You should totally reread the first chapter.

Just sayin'.

last edited at Jan 15, 2017 11:44PM

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

So. Much. Touhou. It's taken me two years, and I'm only up to 2012 doujins.

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

Macarons. The destined chapter.

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

I would find that useful!

Good to know! I'm imagining a mailing list with appropriate contacts from each group, asking which positions they need filled being sent out every two to four weeks. Still looking for an appropriate avenue of distribution for the classifieds themselves as I want it to hit as many yuri readers as possible. Should be far more effective than those credit pages at the ends of scanlations. It's also part of a much larger project, but that's not close to launching yet.

I don't think so. Your name doesn't ring a bell.

Nevermind, different person then. Ran into someone a little while ago and sent them toward Lililicious. Unless you're the person who worked on Mechanics? (I think that was the name of it).

last edited at Dec 3, 2016 11:04PM

Altair Uploader
Image Comments 03 Dec 00:41
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joined Nov 30, 2016
28207715_p0

True, but college women aren't seen as schoolgirls. Torako smokes in yotsuba, so this isn't really a case of smoking in yuri either.

Smoking rabbits, though, that's unforgivable.

Altair Uploader
Reisen%20ds
joined Nov 30, 2016

I'm just gauging interest here, but would people be interested in something like the first post in this thread, only comprehensive? I'm thinking a classifieds page released once or twice a month that lists all current yuri scanlators and what positions they're looking to fill. Also, would list freelancers looking for work.

No project lists though, just teams.

Could be part of a website later where groups can change stuff between postings, create like job postings, teams form, etc. For now, though, just seeing what people think of the classifieds.

This post is for Lililicious. I used to be an editor in a scanlation group, but I haven't edited anything in 4 years. I'd like to pick editing up again and join Lililicious. I sent an email to the address that was listed on your contact page, but I haven't heard back. I don't use IRC, so that's why I'm posting here. It's a long shot but maybe someone will see it or at least someone else will let you know.

You seem familiar, have we met on the internet before?

last edited at Dec 1, 2016 1:32AM