For #pridemonth we're celebrating #LGBTQ #animation and this week, it's #TV shows.
As we get ready to move to films, it would be remiss to not mention #anime.
Anime has a long history of featuring LGBT characters albeit in a particularly Japanese way that is not directly comparable to Western methods. The former reflects Japanese notions of gender and sexuality while the latter espouses a direct relationship between representation and societal progress.
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In more recent years, LGBT themes in anime have become more realistic and reflective of LGBT people. One example is Wandering Sun, based on the manga by Takako Shimura, which was one of the first anime series to depict transgender people in a respectful and sensitive light.
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@admin I will say, there was one anime that was really interesting called #Nana. I didnt get to finish it, but it seemed to be angling for a lesbian &/or bi relationship. With two well crafted characters, in a well executed story.
I do have some disagreements with how it portrays an abuse victim story (doing well, and then not well). But otherwise, I really enjoyed seeing were this story was going.
@admin I've always felt attacked when I comment how their sometimes handled.
People think I'm against it but I just felt many times it has been written poorly.
That's why I'd love for people to watch "Severance" and "Our Flag Means Death". Especially Severance, it was done so cute.. don't want to say too much because spoilers but I loved it.
@admin I do worry sometimes about the BoysLove subgenre, and the fetishization of MLM couples. Representation is great, but it feels like those shows are only concerned with the longing looks, and not as much the individual complexities of two people entering and/or being in a relationship. I have not actually watched one, so I dont know. But from the outside looking in, it seems overly simplified for my taste.