Boys' love: Difference between revisions
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
*[[Lemon (anime)|lemon]] |
*[[Lemon (anime)|lemon]] |
||
*[[Yuri (animation)|yuri]] |
*[[Yuri (animation)|yuri]] |
||
*[[ |
*[[Shotacon]] |
||
*[[ |
*[[Yaoi games]] |
||
*[[ |
*[[Slash fiction]] |
||
*[[ |
*[[Shounen-ai]] |
||
*[[ |
*[[Doujinshi]] |
||
*[[Sukisyo]] (Suki na Mono wa Suki dakara Shoganai!) |
*[[Sukisyo]] (Suki na Mono wa Suki dakara Shoganai!) |
||
*[[Loveless (anime)|Loveless]]<BR> |
*[[Loveless (anime)|Loveless]]<BR> |
||
*[[ |
*[[FAKE]]<BR> |
||
*[[Gravitation]]<BR> |
*[[Gravitation]]<BR> |
||
*[[Earthian]]<BR> |
|||
*[[Eerie Queerie]]<BR> |
*[[Eerie Queerie]]<BR> |
||
*[[Tokyo Babylon]]<BR> |
*[[Tokyo Babylon]]<BR> |
||
Line 43: | Line 44: | ||
*[[Ai no Kusabi]]<BR> |
*[[Ai no Kusabi]]<BR> |
||
*[[Boku no Sexual Harrassment]]<BR> |
*[[Boku no Sexual Harrassment]]<BR> |
||
*[[Zetsuai]]<BR> |
*[[Zetsuai 1989 and Bronze]]<BR> |
||
*[[Kizuna]]<BR> |
*[[Kizuna]]<BR> |
||
*[[Enzai]]<BR> |
|||
*[[Kashou no Tsuki]]<BR> |
|||
*[[Sensitive Pornograph]]<BR> |
*[[Sensitive Pornograph]]<BR> |
||
*[[Yukio Mishima]]<BR> |
*[[Yukio Mishima]]<BR> |
Revision as of 02:01, 21 September 2005

The word Yaoi (pronounced /jaoi/, pronounced "Yah-Oh-ee" rather than "Yow-ee" or "Ya-oy", all three vowels are pronounced) was originally used to refer to fan manga (such as doujinshi) that focused on homosexual relationships between male characters, especially two bishōnen - the manga equivalent of slash.
The term is an acronym derived from the Japanese phrase 「ヤマなし、オチなし、意味なし」 ( yama nashi, ochi nashi, imi nashi ), meaning "no climax, no punch line, no meaning." Its target audience, readership and creators are almost exclusively young to middle-age women, with homosexual and bisexual men of the same age comprising most of the rest.
Women make up the majority of yaoi readership in Japan where it began as manga and, now, around the world. The attraction is often focused on the romantic situations more than the actual homosexuality and homoeroticism.
The term is often used in a general way to refer to male-male sexual or romantic content anywhere in anime, manga and fan fiction based on these; usually of a more sexually explicit nature than the now-obsolete shōnen-ai.
The term "BL" (Boys' Love) is more often used in Japan than the term Yaoi, and all commercially published works are referred to as Boy's Love. There exists a large mainstream market for Boys' Love comics in Japan, as well as a flourishing dōjinshi market. In recent years several popular Japanese BL works have been commercially translated and imported to English-speaking countries by companies such as Be Beautiful and Digital Manga Publishing. Currently-available works include Kazuma Kodaka's Kizuna, and Only the Ring Finger Knows by Satoru Kinnagi and Hotaru Odagiri. Whether such works will have comparable popularity in English-speaking countries remains to be seen.
Over the years, gay-themed comic strips inspired by and referred to as yaoi have been adapted as a sub-culture in North America, with writings and art displayed on websites devoted to it. Notable American yaoi comics include the webcomic Boy Meets Boy by K. Sandra Fuhr, and its successor Friendly Hostility hosted on Keenspot.
Some common subjects of the American yaoi subculture include the boys of Trigun, Cardcaptor Sakura, Dragon Ball, Final Fantasy, Gravitation, Gundam Wing, Naruto, Prince of Tennis, Weiss Kreuz, Yu-Gi-Oh!, and YuYu Hakusho. Generally speaking, if a series features attractive male characters, it will attract yaoi fans. Thus a large amount actually comes from male-oriented shounen & seinen demographics. This sometimes causes conflict because many fans dislike such themes, canonical or otherwise, in particular mainstream fanboys who are stereotypically perceived as homophobic.
Yaoi is often thought of as more "story-based" than heterosexual hentai manga or anime; however, a broad spectrum of "intensity" exists in the genre. Themes range from ordinary themes and mild adult situations to extreme fetish-oriented works, including anthromorphism, cosplay, nonconsensual sex ("non-con"), and even monsters, incest, orgies, and assorted other highly taboo depictions of homosexuality.
Interestingly, though protagonists are male, definite gender-related power structures are prevalent in much of the genre. The "seme,"(攻め) or "attacking," tends to be depicted as the standard male of anime and manga culture: restrained, physically powerful, protective. The "uke" (受け), or "receiving," may be more androgynous or feminized in appearance and demeanor: younger, physically weak, et cetera. Certain authors and works exploit and re-invent these stereotypes; anthologies published by BexBoy, for example, feature sets of stories centered around themes such as "younger seme" or "reversibles." The infamous "height rule"-- referencing height as a measure of power-- also relates to this element of yaoi culture.
References
- Mark McLelland, (2001). "Homoerotic Manga: Why Are Japanese Girls’ Comics full of Boys Bonking?." Intensities: The Journal of Cult Media. 1.
See also
- "Shipping"
- lemon
- yuri
- Shotacon
- Yaoi games
- Slash fiction
- Shounen-ai
- Doujinshi
- Sukisyo (Suki na Mono wa Suki dakara Shoganai!)
- Loveless
- FAKE
- Gravitation
- Earthian
- Eerie Queerie
- Tokyo Babylon
- Only the Ring Finger Knows
- Level-C
- Ai no Kusabi
- Boku no Sexual Harrassment
- Zetsuai 1989 and Bronze
- Kizuna
- Enzai
- Kashou no Tsuki
- Sensitive Pornograph
- Yukio Mishima
- Mori Mari