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Doujinshi

Doujinshi (同人誌), also romanized as dōjinshi, is the Japanese term for self-published print works, such as magazines, manga, and novels. Part of a wider category of doujin (self-published) works, doujinshi are often derivative of existing works and created by amateurs, though some professional artists participate in order to publish material outside the regular industry.

Groups of doujinshi artists refer to themselves as a sākuru (サークル, circle). Several such groups actually consist of a single artist: they are sometimes called kojin sākuru (個人サークル, personal circles).

Since the 1980s, the main method of distribution has been through regular doujinshi conventions, the largest of which is called Comiket (short for "Comic Market") held in the summer and winter in Tokyo's Big Sight. At the convention, over 20 acres (81,000 m2) of doujinshi are bought, sold, and traded by attendees. Doujinshi creators who base their materials on other creators' works normally publish in small numbers to maintain a low profile so as to protect themselves against litigation, making a talented creator's or circle's doujinshi a coveted commodity.

Etymology edit

The term doujinshi is derived from doujin (同人, literally "same person", used to refer to a person or people with whom one shares a common goal or interest) and shi (, a suffix generally meaning "periodical publication").

History edit

The pioneer among doujinshi was Meiroku Zasshi (明六雑誌), published in the early Meiji period (since 1874). Not a literary magazine in fact, Meiroku Zasshi nevertheless played a big role in spreading the idea of doujinshi. The first magazine to publish doujinshi novels was Garakuta Bunko (我楽多文庫), founded in 1885 by writers Ozaki Kōyō and Yamada Bimyo.[1] Doujinshi publication reached its peak in the early Shōwa period, and doujinshi became a mouthpiece for the creative youth of that time. Created and distributed in small circles of authors or close friends, doujinshi contributed significantly to the emergence and development of the shishōsetsu genre. During the postwar years, doujinshi gradually decreased in importance as outlets for different literary schools and new authors. Their role was taken over by literary journals such as Gunzo, Bungakukai and others. One notable exception was Bungei Shuto (文芸首都, lit. Literary Capital), which was published from 1933 until 1969. Few doujinshi magazines survived with the help of official literary journals. Haiku and tanka magazines are still published today.[citation needed]

It has been suggested that technological advances in the field of photocopying during the 1970s contributed to an increase in publishing doujinshi. During this time, manga editors were encouraging manga authors to appeal to a mass market, which may have also contributed to an increase in the popularity of writing doujinshi.[2]

During the 1980s, the content of doujinshi shifted from being predominantly original content to being mostly parodic of existing series.[3] Often called aniparo, this was often an excuse to feature certain characters in romantic relationships. Male authors focused on series like Urusei Yatsura, and female authors focused on series like Captain Tsubasa.[2] This coincided with the rise in popularity of Comiket, the first event dedicated specifically to the distribution of doujinshi, which had been founded in 1975.

As of February 1991, there were some doujinshi creators who sold their work through supportive comic book stores. This practice came to light when three managers of such shops were arrested for having a lolicon doujinshi for sale.[4]

 
Symbol of the Doujin Mark License

Over the last decade, the practice of creating doujinshi has expanded significantly, attracting thousands of creators and fans alike. Advances in personal publishing technology have also fueled this expansion by making it easier for doujinshi creators to write, draw, promote, publish, and distribute their works. For example, some doujinshi are now published on digital media. Furthermore, many doujinshi creators are moving to online download and print-on-demand services, while others are beginning to distribute their works through American channels such as anime shop websites and specialized online direct distribution sites. In 2008, a white paper on the otaku industry was published, this estimated that gross revenue from sales of doujinshi in 2007 were 27.73 billion yen, or 14.9% of total otaku expenditure on their hobby.[5]

To avoid legal problems, the dōjin mark (同人マーク) was created. A license format inspired by Creative Commons licenses,[6] the first author to authorize the license was Ken Akamatsu in the manga UQ Holder!, released on August 28, 2013, in the magazine Weekly Shōnen Magazine.[7]

Comiket edit

Comiket is the world's largest comic convention. It is held twice a year (summer and winter) in Tokyo, Japan. The first CM was held in December 1975, with only about 32 participating circles and an estimated 600 attendees. About 80% of these were female, but male participation in Comiket increased later.[3] In 1982, there were fewer than 10,000 attendees, this increased to over 100,000 attendees as of 1989, and over half a million people in recent years.[8] This rapid increase in attendance enabled doujinshi authors to sell thousands of copies of their works, earning a fair amount of money with their hobby.[9] In 2009, Meiji University opened a dōjin manga library, named "Yoshihiro Yonezawa Memorial Library" to honour its alumni in its Surugadai campus. It contains Yonezawa's own doujinshi collection, comprising 4137 boxes, and the collection of Tsuguo Iwata, another famous person in the sphere of doujinshi.[10]

Categories edit

 
Page from the doujinshi manga about Wikipe-tan, Commons-tan and Wikiquote-tan

Like their mainstream counterparts, doujinshi are published in a variety of genres and types. However, due to the target audience, certain themes are more prevalent, and there are a few major division points by which the publications can be classified. It can be broadly divided into original works and aniparo—works which parody existing anime and manga franchises.[11]

As in fanfics, a very popular theme to explore is non-canonical pairings of characters in a given show (for doujinshi based on mainstream publications). Many such publications contain yaoi or yuri (stories containing same-sex romance) themes, either as a part of non-canon pairings, or as a more direct statement of what can be hinted by the main show.

Another category of doujinshi is furry or kemono, often depicting homosexual male pairings of anthropomorphic animal characters and, less often, lesbian pairings. Furry doujinshi shares some characteristics with the yaoi and yuri genres, with many furry doujinshi depicting characters in erotic settings or circumstances, or incorporating elements typical of anime and manga, such as exaggerated drawings of eyes or facial expressions.

A major part of doujinshi, whether based on mainstream publications or original, contains sexually explicit material, due to both the large demand for such publications and absence of restrictions official publishing houses have to follow. Indeed, often the main point of a given doujinshi is to present an explicit version of a popular show's characters. Such works may be known to English speakers as "H-doujinshi", in line with the former Japanese use of letter H to denote erotic material. The Japanese usage, however, has since moved towards the word ero,[12] and so ero manga (エロ漫画) is the term almost exclusively used to mark doujinshi with adult themes. Sometimes they will also be termed "for adults" (成人向け, seijin muke) or 18-kin (18禁) (an abbreviation of "forbidden to minors less than 18 years of age" (18歳未満禁止, 18-sai-miman kinshi)). To differentiate, ippan (一般, , "general", from the general public it is suitable for) is the term used for publications absent of such content.

Most doujinshi are commercially bound and published by doujinshi-ka (doujinshi authors) who self-publish through various printing services. Copybooks, however, are self-made using xerox machines or other copying methods. Few are copied by drawing by hand.

Not all category terms used by English-language fans of doujinshi are derived from Japanese. For example, an AU doujinshi is one set in an alternate universe.[13]

Legality edit

Many doujinshi are derivative works that are produced without the permission of the original creator, a practice that has existed since the early 1980s.[14] Doujinshi are considered shinkokuzai under Japanese copyright law, meaning that doujinshi creators cannot be prosecuted unless a complaint is made by the holders of the copyrights they have violated.[15] In 2016, then-Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe affirmed that doujinshi "don't compete in the market with the original works and don't damage the original creators' profits, so they are shinkokuzai."[15] Copyright holders take an unofficial policy of non-enforcement towards the doujinshi market, as it is seen as having a beneficial impact on the commercial manga market: it creates an avenue for aspiring manga artists to practice,[16] and talented doujinshi creators are often recruited by publishers.[17] Salil K. Mehra, a law professor at Temple University, hypothesizes that doujinshi market causes the manga market to be more productive, and that strict enforcement of copyright law would cause the industry to suffer.[16]

Notable cases edit

In 1999, the Pokémon doujinshi incident happened, where the author of an erotic Pokémon manga was prosecuted by Nintendo. This created a media furor as well as an academic analysis in Japan of the copyright issues around doujinshi. At this time, the legal analysis seemed to conclude that doujinshi should be overlooked because they are produced by amateurs for one-day events and not sold in the commercial market.[18][need quotation to verify] In 2006, an artist selling an imagined "final chapter" for the series Doraemon, which was never completed, was given a warning by the estate of author Fujiko F. Fujio. His creation apparently looked confusingly similar to a real Doraemon manga. He ceased distribution of his doujinshi and sent compensation to the publisher voluntarily. The publisher noted at this time that doujinshi were not usually a cause of concern for him. The Yomiuri Shimbun noted, "Fanzines don't usually cause many problems as long as they are sold only at one-day exhibitions," but quoted an expert saying that due to their increasing popularity a copyright system should be set up.[19]

In 2020, the Intellectual Property High Court ordered a doujinshi sharing website to pay ¥2.19 million to a creator whose doujinshi were uploaded to the website without their consent. The file sharing site claimed that as the doujinshi was a derivative work it was not protected by copyright law, though the court ruled that there was insufficient evidence to classify the doujinshi as an illegally derivative work. The ruling was noted by commentators as potentially broadening rights for doujinshi creators under commercial law.[20][21]

Impact edit

John Oppliger of AnimeNation stated in 2005 that creating doujinshi is largely popular with Japanese fans, but not with Western fans. Oppliger claimed that because Japanese fans grow up with anime and manga "as a constant companion", they "are more intuitively inclined" to create or expand on existing manga and anime in the form of doujinshi.[22] Since Western fans experience a "more purely" visual experience as most Western fans cannot understand the Japanese language, the original language of most anime, and are "encouraged by social pressure to grow out of cartoons and comics during the onset of adolescence", most of them usually participate in utilizing and rearranging existing work into anime music videos.[23]

In most Western cultures, doujinshi is often perceived to be derivative of existing work, analogous to fan fiction and almost completely pornographic.[24] This is partly true: doujinshi are often, though not always, parodies or alternative storylines involving the worlds of popular manga, game or anime series, and can often feature overtly sexual material. However, there are also many non sexually explicit doujinshi being created as well. The Touhou Project series for example, is known to be notable for the large amount of doujinshi being produced for it that are not pornographic in nature.[25][26] Some groups releasing adults-only themed materials during the annual Touhou only event Reitaisai in 2008 were only estimated at 10%.[26]

Notable artists edit

Individuals edit

  • Yoshitoshi Abe has published some of his original works as doujinshi, such as Haibane Renmei. He cited the reason as, essentially, not wanting to answer to anyone about his work, especially because he saw it as so open-ended.
  • Ken Akamatsu, creator of manga such as Love Hina and Negima, continues to make doujinshi which he sells at Comiket under the pen-name Awa Mizuno.
  • Kiyohiko Azuma, creator of Azumanga Daioh and Yotsuba& started out doing doujinshi using the pen-name A-Zone.[27]
  • Nanae Chrono, creator of the manga Peacemaker Kurogane, has published multiple Naruto doujinshi, most of a yaoi nature.
  • Kazushi Hagiwara, creator of Bastard!!, and his group Studio Loud in School have published popular Bastard!!-related doujinshi such as Wonderful Megadeth!, as well as various Capcom-related doujinshi.[citation needed]
  • Masaki Kajishima, creator of Tenchi Muyo! Ryo-Ohki, has long used the doujinshi format to produce additional information about the series he has created, primarily Tenchi Muyo! Ryo-Ohki and Tenchi Muyo! GXP. These doujinshi can either be completely filled with his work, or he will contribute a work to the doujinshi title. Kajishima's doujinshi works break down into one (or more) types of works: manga-style (where he illustrates a new story, usually with limited text), interviews, early drafts of scripts for the series (giving fans great insight into the creative process), storyboards drawn by Kajishima that ultimately were not animated, story notes (or short stories) giving further little details of various characters, situations, or places in Kajishima's World of Tenchi. As of this writing, Kajishima does two doujinshi titles a year under the circle names "Kajishima Onsen" and "Kamidake Onsen". He has also used these to communicate with fans about his current projects, namely the Saint Knight's Tale spinoff anime featuring Tenchi's half-brother and the GXP novels.
  • Kazuhiko Katō, also known as Monkey Punch, creator of Lupin III began as a doujinshi artist.
  • Kodaka Kazuma, creator of Kizuna, Rotten Teacher's Equation (Kusatta Kyōshi no Hōteishiki), Love Equation (Renai Hōteishiki) and Border among others, has published several parody yaoi doujinshi as K2 Company of Prince of Tennis, Fullmetal Alchemist, and Tiger and Bunny, as well as an original doujinshi series called 'Hana to Ryuu' (Flower and Dragon).
  • Rikdo Koshi, creator of the manga Excel Saga, originally started out as a doujinshi artist.
  • Yun Kouga, a longtime published manga artist and creator of two well-known BL series, Earthian and Loveless has published doujinshi for series such as Gundam Wing and Tiger and Bunny.
  • Sanami Matoh, creator of FAKE, has published parody yaoi doujinshi (mostly of One Piece) and original doujinshi as East End Club.
  • Maki Murakami, creator of Gravitation and Gamers' Heaven. Her circle Crocodile Ave. created Remix Gravitation AKA Rimigra and Megamix Gravitation, which were extremely sexually graphic.[28]
  • Minami Ozaki, creator of the boy's love manga Zetsuai, is an extremely prolific doujinshi creator. She authored numerous yaoi doujinshi before her debut as a professional artist, most notably featuring characters from the soccer manga Captain Tsubasa. The main characters of her manga Zetsuai strongly resemble the main characters of her Captain Tsubasa doujinshi. Ozaki continued to release doujinshi about her own professional manga, often including sexual content that could not be published in Margaret, the young girls-oriented manga magazine in which Zetsuai was serialized.
  • Yukiru Sugisaki, creator of D.N.Angel and The Candidate for Goddess, started as a doujinka. She released doujinshi about King of Fighters, Evangelion, etc.; all were gag doujinshi.
  • Rumiko Takahashi, creator of Ranma ½ and Inuyasha, made doujinshi before she became a professional artist.
  • Yoshihiro Togashi, creator of YuYu Hakusho and Hunter x Hunter, has authored doujinshi such as Church!.
  • Hajime Ueda, the creator of Q•Ko-chan and the comic adaptation of FLCL.
  • Nobuteru Yūki sells doujinshi based on his animated works under his pen-name "The Man in the High Castle".
  • Yana Toboso used to be a yaoi doujinka before she authored Black Butler, which explained why there are some notable BL hints throughout the series.
  • Sunao Minakata, the illustrator of Akuma no Riddle, is a regular doujinka, especially in girls' love theme. Usually makes Touhou doujinshi and has collaborated with other known-for-Touhou-works-popular artists, such as Banpai Akira.
  • Yūko Tsuno, creator of Reizōko (冷蔵庫)
  • Nio Nakatani, creator of the popular yuri manga series Bloom Into You, first became known for her doujinshi work, particularly those based on Touhou Project.

Online edit

Circles edit

See also edit

Related concepts edit

References edit

  1. ^ An article "同人誌" from encyclopedia 世界百科辞典.
  2. ^ a b Galbraith, Patrick W. (2011). "Fujoshi: Fantasy Play and Transgressive Intimacy among "Rotten Girls" in Contemporary Japan". Signs. 37 (1): 211–232. doi:10.1086/660182. S2CID 146718641.
  3. ^ a b Wilson, Brent; Toku, Masami. "Boys' Love," Yaoi, and Art Education: Issues of Power and Pedagogy 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine 2003
  4. ^ Orbaugh, Sharalyn (2003). "Creativity and Constraint in Amateur Manga Production". US-Japan Women's Journal. 25: 104–124.
  5. ^ "2007年のオタク市場規模は1866億円―メディアクリエイトが白書 | インサイド". インサイド (in Japanese). Retrieved April 7, 2017.
  6. ^ Metzger, Axel (2015). Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) and other Alternative License Models: A Comparative Analysis. Springer. p. 274. ISBN 9783319215600
  7. ^ 二次創作OKの意思を示す「同人マーク」運用開始 - 許諾範囲も公開
  8. ^ Lessig, Lawrence (March 25, 2004). "Chapter One: Creators". Free Culture (book). Authorama.com. Retrieved September 8, 2009.
  9. ^ Mizoguchi Akiko (2003). "Male-Male Romance by and for Women in Japan: A History and the Subgenres of Yaoi Fictions". U.S.-Japan Women’s Journal, 25: 49–75.
  10. ^ "Dojin Manga Library "Yoshihiro Yonezawa Memorial Library" opening this Summer". en.gigazine.net. April 2, 2009. Archived from the original on July 8, 2012. Retrieved May 13, 2009.
  11. ^ Sabucco, Veruska "Guided Fan Fiction: Western "Readings" of Japanese Homosexual-Themed Texts" in Berry, Chris, Fran Martin, and Audrey Yue (editors) (2003). Mobile Cultures: New Media in Queer Asia. Durham, North Carolina; London: Duke University Press. ISBN 0-8223-3087-3. pp.70–72
  12. ^ Article on the term "hentai" explains the differences between Japanese and English usage.
  13. ^ elfgrove (May 16, 2008). "Princess Tutu Doujinshi". deviantART: elfgrove's Journal: Princess Tutu Doujinshi. Retrieved September 2, 2011. The story is an AU Swan Lake set after the Princess Tutu anime series... F.A.Q... What does AU mean? Alternate Universe.
  14. ^ McLelland, Mark. Why are Japanese Girls' Comics full of Boys Bonking? 2008-04-15 at the Wayback Machine Refractory: A Journal of Entertainment Media Vol.10, 2006/2007
  15. ^ a b Stimson, Eric (April 9, 2016). "Prime Minister Abe: Dōjinshi Safe Under TPP". Anime News Network. Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  16. ^ a b Mehra, Salil K. (2002). "Copyright and Comics in Japan: Does Law Explain Why All the Cartoons My Kid Watches are Japanese Imports?". Rutgers Law Review. 55. doi:10.2139/ssrn.347620.
  17. ^ Brient, Hervé, ed. (2008). "Entretien avec Hisako Miyoshi". Homosexualité et manga : le yaoi. Manga: 10000 images (in French). Editions H. pp. 17–19. ISBN 978-2-9531781-0-4.
  18. ^ John Ingulsrud and Kate Allen. Reading Japan Cool: Patterns of Manga Literacy and Discourse., Lexington Books, p. 49.
  19. ^ Fukuda Makoto, “Doraemon Fanzine Ignites Copyright Alarms 2017-04-12 at the Wayback Machine,” Daily Yomiuri, June 17, 2007, 22. See also Ingulsrud and Allen, p.49.
  20. ^ Ikeya, Hayato (February 14, 2020). "二次創作でも違法アップロード駄目――"違法同人誌サイト"運営会社に219万円の賠償命令 過去の取材には「存じ上げないサイトですね」". Netorabo (in Japanese). Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  21. ^ Kurihara, Kiyoshi (October 10, 2020). "知財高裁でBL同人作品の無断コピーは著作権侵害という当たり前の判決". Yahoo! Japan (in Japanese). Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  22. ^ Oppliger, John (June 23, 2005). . AnimeNation. Archived from the original on January 11, 2012. Retrieved September 8, 2009.
  23. ^ Oppliger, John (September 8, 2003). . AnimeNation. Archived from the original on April 30, 2009. Retrieved September 8, 2009.
  24. ^ Roh, David S. (2015). "How Japanese Fan Fiction Beat the Lawyers". Illegal literature : toward a disruptive creativity. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-1-4529-4500-2. JSTOR 10.5749/j.ctt19704tx. OCLC 933251286.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved May 9, 2010.
  26. ^ a b "東方のエロ需要が少ないのは何故なんだぜ? - GilCrowsのペネトレイト・トーク". はてなダイアリー. June 2008.
  27. ^ "<<セーラームーン>> A-ZONE VOLUME 2 / A-ZONE - 中古 - 男性向一般同人誌 - 通販ショップの駿河屋". suruga-ya.jp.
  28. ^ Cha, Kai-Ming (2007) Sex & Silliness: Maki Murakami’s Gravitation Publishers Weekly

External links edit

  • Passion: Popular doujinshi fanlisting site
  • Doujinshi DB 2017-12-18 at the Wayback Machine: Huge user-submitted database of doujinshi artists, circles, and books, including name translations
  • Nippon Fanifesto! A Tribute to DIY Manga—an illustrated essay explaining doujinshi and their diversity

doujinshi, 同人誌, also, romanized, dōjinshi, japanese, term, self, published, print, works, such, magazines, manga, novels, part, wider, category, doujin, self, published, works, doujinshi, often, derivative, existing, works, created, amateurs, though, some, pro. Doujinshi 同人誌 also romanized as dōjinshi is the Japanese term for self published print works such as magazines manga and novels Part of a wider category of doujin self published works doujinshi are often derivative of existing works and created by amateurs though some professional artists participate in order to publish material outside the regular industry Groups of doujinshi artists refer to themselves as a sakuru サークル circle Several such groups actually consist of a single artist they are sometimes called kojin sakuru 個人サークル personal circles Since the 1980s the main method of distribution has been through regular doujinshi conventions the largest of which is called Comiket short for Comic Market held in the summer and winter in Tokyo s Big Sight At the convention over 20 acres 81 000 m2 of doujinshi are bought sold and traded by attendees Doujinshi creators who base their materials on other creators works normally publish in small numbers to maintain a low profile so as to protect themselves against litigation making a talented creator s or circle s doujinshi a coveted commodity Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Comiket 3 Categories 4 Legality 4 1 Notable cases 5 Impact 6 Notable artists 6 1 Individuals 6 2 Online 6 3 Circles 7 See also 7 1 Related concepts 8 References 9 External linksEtymology editThe term doujinshi is derived from doujin 同人 literally same person used to refer to a person or people with whom one shares a common goal or interest and shi 誌 a suffix generally meaning periodical publication History editThe pioneer among doujinshi was Meiroku Zasshi 明六雑誌 published in the early Meiji period since 1874 Not a literary magazine in fact Meiroku Zasshi nevertheless played a big role in spreading the idea of doujinshi The first magazine to publish doujinshi novels was Garakuta Bunko 我楽多文庫 founded in 1885 by writers Ozaki Kōyō and Yamada Bimyo 1 Doujinshi publication reached its peak in the early Shōwa period and doujinshi became a mouthpiece for the creative youth of that time Created and distributed in small circles of authors or close friends doujinshi contributed significantly to the emergence and development of the shishōsetsu genre During the postwar years doujinshi gradually decreased in importance as outlets for different literary schools and new authors Their role was taken over by literary journals such as Gunzo Bungakukai and others One notable exception was Bungei Shuto 文芸首都 lit Literary Capital which was published from 1933 until 1969 Few doujinshi magazines survived with the help of official literary journals Haiku and tanka magazines are still published today citation needed It has been suggested that technological advances in the field of photocopying during the 1970s contributed to an increase in publishing doujinshi During this time manga editors were encouraging manga authors to appeal to a mass market which may have also contributed to an increase in the popularity of writing doujinshi 2 During the 1980s the content of doujinshi shifted from being predominantly original content to being mostly parodic of existing series 3 Often called aniparo this was often an excuse to feature certain characters in romantic relationships Male authors focused on series like Urusei Yatsura and female authors focused on series like Captain Tsubasa 2 This coincided with the rise in popularity of Comiket the first event dedicated specifically to the distribution of doujinshi which had been founded in 1975 As of February 1991 there were some doujinshi creators who sold their work through supportive comic book stores This practice came to light when three managers of such shops were arrested for having a lolicon doujinshi for sale 4 nbsp Symbol of the Doujin Mark LicenseOver the last decade the practice of creating doujinshi has expanded significantly attracting thousands of creators and fans alike Advances in personal publishing technology have also fueled this expansion by making it easier for doujinshi creators to write draw promote publish and distribute their works For example some doujinshi are now published on digital media Furthermore many doujinshi creators are moving to online download and print on demand services while others are beginning to distribute their works through American channels such as anime shop websites and specialized online direct distribution sites In 2008 a white paper on the otaku industry was published this estimated that gross revenue from sales of doujinshi in 2007 were 27 73 billion yen or 14 9 of total otaku expenditure on their hobby 5 To avoid legal problems the dōjin mark 同人マーク was created A license format inspired by Creative Commons licenses 6 the first author to authorize the license was Ken Akamatsu in the manga UQ Holder released on August 28 2013 in the magazine Weekly Shōnen Magazine 7 Comiket edit Main article Comiket Comiket is the world s largest comic convention It is held twice a year summer and winter in Tokyo Japan The first CM was held in December 1975 with only about 32 participating circles and an estimated 600 attendees About 80 of these were female but male participation in Comiket increased later 3 In 1982 there were fewer than 10 000 attendees this increased to over 100 000 attendees as of 1989 and over half a million people in recent years 8 This rapid increase in attendance enabled doujinshi authors to sell thousands of copies of their works earning a fair amount of money with their hobby 9 In 2009 Meiji University opened a dōjin manga library named Yoshihiro Yonezawa Memorial Library to honour its alumni in its Surugadai campus It contains Yonezawa s own doujinshi collection comprising 4137 boxes and the collection of Tsuguo Iwata another famous person in the sphere of doujinshi 10 Categories edit nbsp Page from the doujinshi manga about Wikipe tan Commons tan and Wikiquote tanLike their mainstream counterparts doujinshi are published in a variety of genres and types However due to the target audience certain themes are more prevalent and there are a few major division points by which the publications can be classified It can be broadly divided into original works and aniparo works which parody existing anime and manga franchises 11 As in fanfics a very popular theme to explore is non canonical pairings of characters in a given show for doujinshi based on mainstream publications Many such publications contain yaoi or yuri stories containing same sex romance themes either as a part of non canon pairings or as a more direct statement of what can be hinted by the main show Another category of doujinshi is furry or kemono often depicting homosexual male pairings of anthropomorphic animal characters and less often lesbian pairings Furry doujinshi shares some characteristics with the yaoi and yuri genres with many furry doujinshi depicting characters in erotic settings or circumstances or incorporating elements typical of anime and manga such as exaggerated drawings of eyes or facial expressions A major part of doujinshi whether based on mainstream publications or original contains sexually explicit material due to both the large demand for such publications and absence of restrictions official publishing houses have to follow Indeed often the main point of a given doujinshi is to present an explicit version of a popular show s characters Such works may be known to English speakers as H doujinshi in line with the former Japanese use of letter H to denote erotic material The Japanese usage however has since moved towards the word ero 12 and so ero manga エロ漫画 is the term almost exclusively used to mark doujinshi with adult themes Sometimes they will also be termed for adults 成人向け seijin muke or 18 kin 18禁 an abbreviation of forbidden to minors less than 18 years of age 18歳未満禁止 18 sai miman kinshi To differentiate ippan 一般 general from the general public it is suitable for is the term used for publications absent of such content Most doujinshi are commercially bound and published by doujinshi ka doujinshi authors who self publish through various printing services Copybooks however are self made using xerox machines or other copying methods Few are copied by drawing by hand Not all category terms used by English language fans of doujinshi are derived from Japanese For example an AU doujinshi is one set in an alternate universe 13 Legality editMany doujinshi are derivative works that are produced without the permission of the original creator a practice that has existed since the early 1980s 14 Doujinshi are considered shinkokuzai under Japanese copyright law meaning that doujinshi creators cannot be prosecuted unless a complaint is made by the holders of the copyrights they have violated 15 In 2016 then Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe affirmed that doujinshi don t compete in the market with the original works and don t damage the original creators profits so they are shinkokuzai 15 Copyright holders take an unofficial policy of non enforcement towards the doujinshi market as it is seen as having a beneficial impact on the commercial manga market it creates an avenue for aspiring manga artists to practice 16 and talented doujinshi creators are often recruited by publishers 17 Salil K Mehra a law professor at Temple University hypothesizes that doujinshi market causes the manga market to be more productive and that strict enforcement of copyright law would cause the industry to suffer 16 Notable cases edit In 1999 the Pokemon doujinshi incident happened where the author of an erotic Pokemon manga was prosecuted by Nintendo This created a media furor as well as an academic analysis in Japan of the copyright issues around doujinshi At this time the legal analysis seemed to conclude that doujinshi should be overlooked because they are produced by amateurs for one day events and not sold in the commercial market 18 need quotation to verify In 2006 an artist selling an imagined final chapter for the series Doraemon which was never completed was given a warning by the estate of author Fujiko F Fujio His creation apparently looked confusingly similar to a real Doraemon manga He ceased distribution of his doujinshi and sent compensation to the publisher voluntarily The publisher noted at this time that doujinshi were not usually a cause of concern for him The Yomiuri Shimbun noted Fanzines don t usually cause many problems as long as they are sold only at one day exhibitions but quoted an expert saying that due to their increasing popularity a copyright system should be set up 19 In 2020 the Intellectual Property High Court ordered a doujinshi sharing website to pay 2 19 million to a creator whose doujinshi were uploaded to the website without their consent The file sharing site claimed that as the doujinshi was a derivative work it was not protected by copyright law though the court ruled that there was insufficient evidence to classify the doujinshi as an illegally derivative work The ruling was noted by commentators as potentially broadening rights for doujinshi creators under commercial law 20 21 Impact editJohn Oppliger of AnimeNation stated in 2005 that creating doujinshi is largely popular with Japanese fans but not with Western fans Oppliger claimed that because Japanese fans grow up with anime and manga as a constant companion they are more intuitively inclined to create or expand on existing manga and anime in the form of doujinshi 22 Since Western fans experience a more purely visual experience as most Western fans cannot understand the Japanese language the original language of most anime and are encouraged by social pressure to grow out of cartoons and comics during the onset of adolescence most of them usually participate in utilizing and rearranging existing work into anime music videos 23 In most Western cultures doujinshi is often perceived to be derivative of existing work analogous to fan fiction and almost completely pornographic 24 This is partly true doujinshi are often though not always parodies or alternative storylines involving the worlds of popular manga game or anime series and can often feature overtly sexual material However there are also many non sexually explicit doujinshi being created as well The Touhou Project series for example is known to be notable for the large amount of doujinshi being produced for it that are not pornographic in nature 25 26 Some groups releasing adults only themed materials during the annual Touhou only event Reitaisai in 2008 were only estimated at 10 26 Notable artists editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This list of famous or notable people has no clear inclusion or exclusion criteria Please help to define clear inclusion criteria and edit the list to contain only subjects that fit those criteria April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Individuals edit Yoshitoshi Abe has published some of his original works as doujinshi such as Haibane Renmei He cited the reason as essentially not wanting to answer to anyone about his work especially because he saw it as so open ended Ken Akamatsu creator of manga such as Love Hina and Negima continues to make doujinshi which he sells at Comiket under the pen name Awa Mizuno Kiyohiko Azuma creator of Azumanga Daioh and Yotsuba amp started out doing doujinshi using the pen name A Zone 27 Nanae Chrono creator of the manga Peacemaker Kurogane has published multiple Naruto doujinshi most of a yaoi nature Kazushi Hagiwara creator of Bastard and his group Studio Loud in School have published popular Bastard related doujinshi such as Wonderful Megadeth as well as various Capcom related doujinshi citation needed Masaki Kajishima creator of Tenchi Muyo Ryo Ohki has long used the doujinshi format to produce additional information about the series he has created primarily Tenchi Muyo Ryo Ohki and Tenchi Muyo GXP These doujinshi can either be completely filled with his work or he will contribute a work to the doujinshi title Kajishima s doujinshi works break down into one or more types of works manga style where he illustrates a new story usually with limited text interviews early drafts of scripts for the series giving fans great insight into the creative process storyboards drawn by Kajishima that ultimately were not animated story notes or short stories giving further little details of various characters situations or places in Kajishima s World of Tenchi As of this writing Kajishima does two doujinshi titles a year under the circle names Kajishima Onsen and Kamidake Onsen He has also used these to communicate with fans about his current projects namely the Saint Knight s Tale spinoff anime featuring Tenchi s half brother and the GXP novels Kazuhiko Katō also known as Monkey Punch creator of Lupin III began as a doujinshi artist Kodaka Kazuma creator of Kizuna Rotten Teacher s Equation Kusatta Kyōshi no Hōteishiki Love Equation Renai Hōteishiki and Border among others has published several parody yaoi doujinshi as K2 Company of Prince of Tennis Fullmetal Alchemist and Tiger and Bunny as well as an original doujinshi series called Hana to Ryuu Flower and Dragon Rikdo Koshi creator of the manga Excel Saga originally started out as a doujinshi artist Yun Kouga a longtime published manga artist and creator of two well known BL series Earthian and Loveless has published doujinshi for series such as Gundam Wing and Tiger and Bunny Sanami Matoh creator of FAKE has published parody yaoi doujinshi mostly of One Piece and original doujinshi as East End Club Maki Murakami creator of Gravitation and Gamers Heaven Her circle Crocodile Ave created Remix Gravitation AKA Rimigra and Megamix Gravitation which were extremely sexually graphic 28 Minami Ozaki creator of the boy s love manga Zetsuai is an extremely prolific doujinshi creator She authored numerous yaoi doujinshi before her debut as a professional artist most notably featuring characters from the soccer manga Captain Tsubasa The main characters of her manga Zetsuai strongly resemble the main characters of her Captain Tsubasa doujinshi Ozaki continued to release doujinshi about her own professional manga often including sexual content that could not be published in Margaret the young girls oriented manga magazine in which Zetsuai was serialized Yukiru Sugisaki creator of D N Angel and The Candidate for Goddess started as a doujinka She released doujinshi about King of Fighters Evangelion etc all were gag doujinshi Rumiko Takahashi creator of Ranma and Inuyasha made doujinshi before she became a professional artist Yoshihiro Togashi creator of YuYu Hakusho and Hunter x Hunter has authored doujinshi such as Church Hajime Ueda the creator of Q Ko chan and the comic adaptation of FLCL Nobuteru Yuki sells doujinshi based on his animated works under his pen name The Man in the High Castle Yana Toboso used to be a yaoi doujinka before she authored Black Butler which explained why there are some notable BL hints throughout the series Sunao Minakata the illustrator of Akuma no Riddle is a regular doujinka especially in girls love theme Usually makes Touhou doujinshi and has collaborated with other known for Touhou works popular artists such as Banpai Akira Yuko Tsuno creator of Reizōko 冷蔵庫 Nio Nakatani creator of the popular yuri manga series Bloom Into You first became known for her doujinshi work particularly those based on Touhou Project Online edit Bleedman creator of the online Powerpuff Girls Doujinshi Grim Tales From Down Below and Sugar Bits Fred Gallagher creator of the Megatokyo series as well as the in development series Warmth His Megatokyo co creator and former writer Rodney Largo Caston can also be considered one though Caston has since left the business Daniel Kim creator of the Cardcaptor Sakura parody Tomoyo42 s Room has written and illustrated several doujinshi all of which are hosted at the Clone Manga collective Jesus Garcia Ferrer Jesulink created Raruto a Spanish Naruto doujinshi published online Fabio Yabu produced the sentai spoof Combo Rangers Circles edit 07th Expansion creators of both Higurashi no Naku Koro ni and Umineko no Naku Koro ni Clamp started out as a doujinshi group of 11 known as Clamp Cluster See also edit nbsp Anime and manga portalDōjin music Dōjin soft Niigata Comic Market Otaku HentaiRelated concepts edit Amateur press association Fanzine Fan fiction Minicomic Self publishingReferences edit An article 同人誌 from encyclopedia 世界百科辞典 a b Galbraith Patrick W 2011 Fujoshi Fantasy Play and Transgressive Intimacy among Rotten Girls in Contemporary Japan Signs 37 1 211 232 doi 10 1086 660182 S2CID 146718641 a b Wilson Brent Toku Masami Boys Love Yaoi and Art Education Issues of Power and Pedagogy Archived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine 2003 Orbaugh Sharalyn 2003 Creativity and Constraint in Amateur Manga Production US Japan Women s Journal 25 104 124 2007年のオタク市場規模は1866億円 メディアクリエイトが白書 インサイド インサイド in Japanese Retrieved April 7 2017 Metzger Axel 2015 Free and Open Source Software FOSS and other Alternative License Models A Comparative Analysis Springer p 274 ISBN 9783319215600 二次創作OKの意思を示す 同人マーク 運用開始 許諾範囲も公開 Lessig Lawrence March 25 2004 Chapter One Creators Free Culture book Authorama com Retrieved September 8 2009 Mizoguchi Akiko 2003 Male Male Romance by and for Women in Japan A History and the Subgenres of Yaoi Fictions U S Japan Women s Journal 25 49 75 Dojin Manga Library Yoshihiro Yonezawa Memorial Library opening this Summer en gigazine net April 2 2009 Archived from the original on July 8 2012 Retrieved May 13 2009 Sabucco Veruska Guided Fan Fiction Western Readings of Japanese Homosexual Themed Texts in Berry Chris Fran Martin and Audrey Yue editors 2003 Mobile Cultures New Media in Queer Asia Durham North Carolina London Duke University Press ISBN 0 8223 3087 3 pp 70 72 Article on the term hentai explains the differences between Japanese and English usage elfgrove May 16 2008 Princess Tutu Doujinshi deviantART elfgrove s Journal Princess Tutu Doujinshi Retrieved September 2 2011 The story is an AU Swan Lake set after the Princess Tutu anime series F A Q What does AU mean Alternate Universe McLelland Mark Why are Japanese Girls Comics full of Boys Bonking Archived 2008 04 15 at the Wayback Machine Refractory A Journal of Entertainment Media Vol 10 2006 2007 a b Stimson Eric April 9 2016 Prime Minister Abe Dōjinshi Safe Under TPP Anime News Network Retrieved October 26 2020 a b Mehra Salil K 2002 Copyright and Comics in Japan Does Law Explain Why All the Cartoons My Kid Watches are Japanese Imports Rutgers Law Review 55 doi 10 2139 ssrn 347620 Brient Herve ed 2008 Entretien avec Hisako Miyoshi Homosexualite et manga le yaoi Manga 10000 images in French Editions H pp 17 19 ISBN 978 2 9531781 0 4 John Ingulsrud and Kate Allen Reading Japan Cool Patterns of Manga Literacy and Discourse Lexington Books p 49 Fukuda Makoto Doraemon Fanzine Ignites Copyright Alarms Archived 2017 04 12 at the Wayback Machine Daily Yomiuri June 17 2007 22 See also Ingulsrud and Allen p 49 Ikeya Hayato February 14 2020 二次創作でも違法アップロード駄目 違法同人誌サイト 運営会社に219万円の賠償命令 過去の取材には 存じ上げないサイトですね Netorabo in Japanese Retrieved October 26 2020 Kurihara Kiyoshi October 10 2020 知財高裁でBL同人作品の無断コピーは著作権侵害という当たり前の判決 Yahoo Japan in Japanese Retrieved October 26 2020 Oppliger John June 23 2005 Ask John Why Hasn t Doujinshi Caught on Outside of Japan AnimeNation Archived from the original on January 11 2012 Retrieved September 8 2009 Oppliger John September 8 2003 Ask John Why Are Anime Music Videos so Popular AnimeNation Archived from the original on April 30 2009 Retrieved September 8 2009 Roh David S 2015 How Japanese Fan Fiction Beat the Lawyers Illegal literature toward a disruptive creativity Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 1 4529 4500 2 JSTOR 10 5749 j ctt19704tx OCLC 933251286 第七回博麗神社例大祭サークルリスト Archived from the original on July 21 2011 Retrieved May 9 2010 a b 東方のエロ需要が少ないのは何故なんだぜ GilCrowsのペネトレイト トーク はてなダイアリー June 2008 lt lt セーラームーン gt gt A ZONE VOLUME 2 A ZONE 中古 男性向一般同人誌 通販ショップの駿河屋 suruga ya jp Cha Kai Ming 2007 Sex amp Silliness Maki Murakami s Gravitation Publishers WeeklyExternal links editPassion Popular doujinshi fanlisting site Doujinshi DB Archived 2017 12 18 at the Wayback Machine Huge user submitted database of doujinshi artists circles and books including name translations Nippon Fanifesto A Tribute to DIY Manga an illustrated essay explaining doujinshi and their diversity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Doujinshi amp oldid 1185704626, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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