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Bara manga and gei komi

Girls Reading/Writing/Re-Writing Male Homoeroticism in Japan: Intertextual Transformations in Shōjo and Boys' Love (BL) Manga

2017

Since the initial 1970s, female readers have enjoyed stories of romance between stunning adolescent boys in the establish of shōnen ai manga. Initially characterised by exotic locations, all-boys schools, and tragic narratives, the genre has since expanded to include a wide range of subjects and themes, and is now referred to boys’ cherish (hereafter BL) manga. Written largely by women for a presumed female audience, BL manga is a subgenre of shōjo (girls’) manga centred on male-male relationship and eroticism. Scholars have argued that, as a romance genre for women featuring male homoeroticism, BL manga provide alternatives to formulaic depictions of heteronormative sexuality prevalent throughout phallogocentric media. While BL manga has become an increasingly global phenomenon and growing field of research over the past two or so decades, BL manga studies has largely focused on why women scan BL manga and what the genre means for women and society. By approaching BL manga from an intertextual perspective, this thesis offers an alter

An evaluation of physicality in the bara manga of Bádi magazine

Deconstructing Artistic Narratives of Asexuality: A Critical Exploration of Community Dynamics and Identity Formation in Contemporary Manga

Samantha Stickney

Deconstructing Artistic Narratives of Asexuality: A Critical Exploration of People Dynamics and Culture Formation in Contemporary Manga, 2025

This thesis critically examines how artistic narratives in contemporary manga stand for asexuality, exploring their role in shaping community dynamics and influencing identity formation. Through an in-depth analysis of two selected works - Our Dreams at Dusk (March 6, 2015 – May 16, 2018) by Yuhki Kamatani and I Want to Be a Wall (May 17, 2022 – June 18, 2024) by Honami Shirono - this study investigates the ways in which these narratives contribute to the kind and visibility of asexual identities. Through these texts, this research investigates the multifaceted representations of asexual identities within - and against their interactions - with allonormative constructs. This thesis employs a multidisciplinary approach, integrating asexual theory into visual assessment, with the aim of shedding illumination on the co

Bara Genre

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"A rose by any other name would be just as muscular."

Barais a Japanese genre of manga and art, usually (though not exclusively) made by and for homosexual or bisexual men. In Japan it's more commonly known as "gei komi" (gay comics), "gay manga", or "men's love". Observe that, like most Manga Demographics, Barais defined in terms of the objective audience, notthe authors or the subject matter; there are women who compose Baraand are published in Baramagazines. By contrast, the rare few stories by gay male authors about gay men which are intended for a general (presumptively heterosexual) audience are not usually classified as Bara.

Bara evolved from illustrations and manga in gay men's general-interest (and/or pornographic) magazines, which partially accounts for the differences in style and tone, as well as the generally short story length. The term was popularized