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Shota magazines from the 2000s

The rise and fall of commercial shota magazines

2020-05-10 by ケイ 1 Comment

This is an English summary of the second through fourth chapters of ショタコンのゆりかご (shotacon no yurikago = “the cradle of shotacon”) by shota researcher Budōuri Kusuko, published as a dōjinshi in 2007. Budōuri-san stresses that his essay only concerns commercial shota publications, not dōjinshi.

The rise of commercial shota

In the beginning, shortly after the term’s inception in 1981, “shotacon” referred to all kinds of boys, from 2D anime characters to 3D child actors.

The latter half of the 1980s saw the birth of exclusive shota anthologies. Following the boom of derivative yaoi works based on Captain Tsubasa, the first shota anthology つばさ百貨店 (Tsubasa Hyakkaten = “Tsubasa department store”) was launched in January 1987.

This kind of anthology contained various dōjinshi that had been selected to be published commercially. Several dōjinshi anthologies based on Captain Tsubasa, Saint Seiya, and Legendary Armor Samurai Troopers (Ronin Warriors) followed. They were soon joined by the characters from Mashin Eiyūden Wataru and Madō King Granzort, the former of which was pivotal for the shota genre’s breakthrough, as we have seen before:

Wataru and the birth of shota in mainstream anime

Dōjinshi anthologies were followed by original anthologies, for which authors contributed original comics based on a certain theme. The anthology b-Boy 特集 ショタコン (b-boy tokushū shotacon = “special issue shotacon”) from October 1994 was important, since it was the first time the word “shotacon” appeared as a designation of the content on the cover.

Judging from the reader letters, Budōuri-san notes that there seems to have been little consensus at the time on what shotacon really meant.

The terminology dictionary 現代用語の基礎知識, 1991 edition. (Source: Mercari.)

In the 1991 edition of the annually published terminology dictionary 現代用語の基礎知識 (gendaiyōgo no kisochishiki ≈ “basic knowledge of contemporary terms”), shotacon was listed under yaoi, and described thusly:

ロリコンに対抗する少女たちの『少年趣味』をショタコン(正太郎コンプレックス)と、かつて呼んでいたが

The “boy hobby” of girls corresponding to lolicon is called shotacon (Shotarō complex)

In April 1995, TIP TAP became the first anthology series that focused entirely on shotacon. It was published by Eikō Publishing and had the subtitle “ショタコン ONLY アンソロジー” (“shotacon ONLY anthology”). Although TIP TAP was discontinued after the third issue, the boom of shotacon anthologies that followed would have been impossible without it, Budōuri-san writes.

It seems to me that Budōuri-san mourns what TIP TAP could have become. He notes that it seems to have been planned as a book-like magazine with serialisations, readers’ corner, and the like. My thoughts wander to Shōnen Jump. What if TIP TAP had become a Shotacon Jump that lived on, year after year, as the go-to authority of shotacon expression? Instead, we got a scattered stream of one-shots from publishers hoping to make a buck on the new genre, like a gold rush, or in this case: A boy rush. Which eventually faded, as we shall see.

The decline of commercial shota

Several “shotacon only” publications were founded by major publishing companies in the wake of TIP TAP’s 1994 launch:

  • 1995: テディボーイ (Teddy Boy), a “shotacon only anthology” (Takeshobo)
  • 1996: ROMEO, with the English slogan “WE are SHŌTARO COMPLEX” (Naito Issuisha)
  • 1997: COMIC厨子王 (Comic Zushi-ō = “comic prince”) (Shobunkan)

Other publications didn’t mention “shotacon” explicitly, but experimented in the new genre in a way that Budōuri-san aptly calls “trial and error”. An example would be U.C.Boys from the major adult publisher Akane Shinsha, which claimed to be “a book with boys, by boys, for boys” (“男の子による男の子のための男の子本”).

Published over three and a half years, ROMEO was the most long-lived of the new magazines. It had a bustling reader section.

Other titles from the first wave of commercial shota magazines in the 1990s (left to right): ジャニー, 秘密少年, X kids. Second row from left: ショタキング, BOY MEETS BOY, D-Pri. None of these titles had the “adult comics” mark.

Budōuri-san next turns to Manda Ringo’s unique book The Syotaroh from 1996, where he notes a divide between male and female shota fans in how they think about shota and sexuality. He also notes what I understand as an unreflected optimism from Ringo’s side, which in retrospect turned out to be unfounded. (I think this is true also for Watanabe Yumiko’s essay ショタの研究 – shota no kenkyū = “shota research” – from 1998. It is telling that both texts were published in the latter half of the 1990s, right in the middle of the commercial shota boom.)

A new law on child pornography was passed in 1999. I’m trying to understand from the text if there was a relation to the publication Pet‐BOY’s, with the English log line “SHOTA‐COM COMIC ANTHOLOGY”, which was launched in October 1997 and became something of a sensation with its explicit adult expressions. In any case, by the end of 1999, most commercial shota anthologies had ceased publication.

Following the mass death of shota publications in 1999, there was a black hole of nothingness for about two years, at least in regards of commercial and exclusive shota publications. During this time, shota expressions lived on in subsections of other magazines.

The next shota wave

In 2002, the next shota wave was initiated with the publication of ショタコミ (shotacomi) by Shobunkan. The editors stated clearly the purpose of the magazine:

ショタコミック誌の再興を目指し立ち上がった「ショタコミ」

We launched Shotacomi to revive the shota comic magazine.

Other shota titles followed in 2003, which unlike Shotacomi had the “adult comic” mark:

  • 好色少年のススメ (kōshoku-shōnen no susume ≈ “boy desire digest”) from Akane Shinsha
  • 少年愛の美学 (shōnen-ai no bigaku ≈ “boys’ love aesthetics”) from Shobunkan
  • 少年嗜好 (shōnen shikō ≈ “boy taste”) from Ōtōshobō (nowadays Oakla Publishing)
The second wave of commercial shota magazines in the 2000s: 少年愛の美学 7 (left) and 好色少年のススメ 9. Both had the “adult comics” mark.

It seems Shotacomi split into 少年愛の美学 and 妄想少年 (mōsō-shōnen ≈ “boy delusion” or “delusional boys” – I discuss the term mōsō here). Budōuri-san notes that these publications seem more aware of their controversial content, as both state that no character is underage.

Shobunkan played an important role in the new wave of shota publications, not least when they started publishing books whose existence was not dependent on an “adult comics” mark (unlike magazines?). This trend, which other publishers soon followed, started with ショタコミ Collection (shotacomi collection).

Non-sexual (or less sexual) BL anthologies evaded the “adult comic” mark. One example is X kids, published by Kasakura from 1998 to 2005.

As shotacon became a more well known phenomenon, the definition in 現代用語の基礎知識 explanded over the years. Whereas the 1997 version equaled a shotacon with “a woman interested only in boys, as well as such a hobby”, the 2000 edition had expanded the definition of shotacon to both sexes:

少年にしか興味を示さない人。そのような趣味。ショートアイズ・コ ンプレックスから。両目の間が近い子どもを指す俗語。

A person interested only in boys, as well as such a hobby. From “short eyes complex”, a slang term denoting children with close-set eyes.

(So they got the etymology wrong, despite it was Comiket director Yonezawa Yoshihiro who was in charge for manga terms.)

The end of the next shota wave

Both 少年愛の美学 and 好色少年のススメ published their last issues in 2006. 少年嗜好 continued publishing but has gradually become more focused on 女装 (josō ≈ cross-dressing). The editor of 少年嗜好 is also involved in 男の娘HEAVEN (otoko-no-ko heaven), which is focused on the cross-dressing shota genre otoko-no-ko.

Budōuri-san concludes that commercial shota expressions keep changing, maybe as a way to adapt and survive on a market where the readers’ taste differ widely. The first and the second shota wave differed in that regard, and dōjinshi have kept widening the readerbase since 2002.

So in conclusion, Budōuri-san has documented two waves of commercial shota magazines, from 1994 to 1999, and from 2002 to 2006. Since the chapters were written in 2006 and 2007, the natural question is what has happened on the shota market since then.

Resources

  • ぶどううり・くすこ (Budōuri Kusuko) on Twitter
  • Budōuri-san’s extended profile page with many links
  • Web version of ショタコンのゆりかご (Shotacon no yurikago)

Filed Under: Uncategorized

ショタコンのゆりかご

2020-05-10 by ケイ Leave a Comment

In ショタコンのゆりかご (shotacon no yurikago = “the cradle of shotacon”), shota expert Budōuri Kusuko (interviewed in 腐男子にきく) traces the origins of the manga genre shotacon. His focus is commercial shota magazines rather than dōjinshi.

The essay begins with a richly referenced study (first published in October 2006) into the etymology of the word shotacon, which partly relies on Watanabe Yumiko’s essay ショタの研究 (shota no kenkyū = “shota research”).

The second chapter describes “the development of shota expressions” in the 1990s, and the third chapter documents a temporary decline in the genre in the late 1990s.

The fourth and last chapter (first published in September 2007) is devoted to the development of commercial shota publications in the first years of this millennium (up until when Budōuri-san wrote his essay).

ショタコンのゆりかご is an excellent resource that provides important historical data to shota research.

A 10 page appendix with data on shota titles accompanies this essay.

An English summary of Budōuri’s findings can be found here:

The rise and fall of commercial shota magazines

Filed Under: Dōjinshi, Research

Yankee Shota to Otaku Onee-san

Real shota

2020-05-05 by ケイ Leave a Comment

A scene in ヤンキーショタとオタクおねえさん (yankī-shota to otaku-onēsan ≈ yankee boy and otaku girl) by 星海 ユミ (Hoshimi Yumi) beautifully captures the sensitive subject of “real shota”.

ヤンキーショタとオタクおねえさん

The story centers around a fujoshi who a month earlier was befriended by the 11-year-old boy next door, Aikawa-kun. In the book’s first scene, Aikawa-kun insists on following the woman to a dōjinshi event (which turns out to be for BL manga) and sort of makes a fool of himself and her, so they leave immediately. In the subway on their way back the woman laments that she didn’t buy a single book because of the stupid boy. But looking at the beautiful sleeping boy next to her, it suddenly dawns on her: “This is my chance to touch a real shota!” (Devil horns!)

「これはもしやリアルショタを触るチャンスなのでは!!?」(ヤンキーショタとオタクおねえさん)

The moment is broken when their stop is announced: “We will soon arrive at Tanizaki station.” (Obviously a reference to the Japanese author 谷崎潤一郎/Tanizaki Jun’ichirō, whose books presented “a shocking world of sexuality and destructive erotic obsessions” according to Wikipedia.)

The woman gets up with the boy and says to herself: “That was close … what the hell was I doing!!!” And: “If this came out, I would be dead …”

I really liked how the manga brought up a theme that certainly occupies the mind of many shotacon. It is of special interest to me, since my research is focused on how we think about 2D and 3D realities.

A full review of this amusing series will follow!

Filed Under: Book, Commercial, Research Tagged With: 3D, Hoshimi Yumi, ヤンキー, ヤンキーショタ, リアル, 星海ユミ

Yankee manga (ヤンキー漫画)

What is “yankee shota” (ヤンキーショタ)?

2020-04-10 by ケイ Leave a Comment

It was during one of those late-night manga hauls at Book-off that I came across a genre which I first thought was BL, but which turned out to be “yankee” (ヤンキー), or “bad boy” (不良/furyō) manga.

The series that caught my eyes was Akira No.2 (アキラNo.2) by Okujima Hiromasa (奥嶋ひろまさ) – and you’ll have to excuse me for thinking BL:

Akira No.2 (アキラNo.2) by Okujima Hiromasa (奥嶋ひろまさ). Cover art, volume 1 and 4.

Yankee manga is about “delinquent boys”, or 不良行為少年/furyō kōi shōnen, which according to Wikipedia is the level below actual “juvenile criminals” (虞犯少年/guhan shōnen). Rather than criminals, delinquent boys are those who roam the streets at night, who drink and smoke, and who threaten the morality of society (and themselves) in general. And yes, there are furyōshōjo too (delinquent girls).

I can understand how this genre can be enticing in Japan, where that kind of personality is not very common, at least not compared to the West, where it is rather the norm for teenagers to be a bit delinquent. That’s why it’s called “yankee”, I was told, as in boys behaving in an “American” way. (I also thought that the magazine Young King, which publishes this kind of comics, had something to do with the term, but both “young” is a common word in magazine titles.)

I found this ranking of the 14 best yankee manga, and realised that I also bought two volumes of Nanba MG5 (ナンバMG5) by Ozawa Toshio (小沢としお) that night at Book-off:

Nanba MG5 小沢としお
Nanba MG5 (ナンバMG5) by Ozawa Toshio (小沢としお). Cover art, volume 5 and 14.

I think this genre is not even boys’ manga, but rather seinen because of the violent content. But the blunt display of skin and muscles make it transcend into BL territory, and almost the shota variety called kinshota, or muscle shota. The hard masculinity of the characters also plays into a certain kind of shota taste, one distinct from the mainstream focus on cuteness. This is more Yabuki Joe than Ikusabe Wataru, if you know what I mean.

While browsing Amazon, I came across Dōsei yankī Akamatsu Sebun (同棲ヤンキー赤松セブン ≈ “cohabitation yankee Akamatsu seven”), which is written by SHOOWA and illustrated by Akira No.2 mangaka Okujima Hiromasa (奥嶋ひろまさ):

Dōsei yankī Akamatsu Sebun (同棲ヤンキー赤松セブン), cover art.
Dōsei yankī Akamatsu Sebun (同棲ヤンキー赤松セブン), cover art.

This seems like a yankee/BL cross-over, with the kanji reading for “co-habitation” (dōsei/どうせい = 同棲) being the same as that for “same sex” or “gay” (dōsei/どうせい = 同性). The fact that it is drawn by the Akira No.2 author sort of acknowledges the sexual aspect of yankee manga.

Then I came across a series called Yankī-shota to otaku-onēsan (ヤンキーショタとオタクおねえさん) by Hoshimi Yumi (星海ユミ), or “Yankee boy and otaku big sister”:

“ヤンキーショタとオタクおねえさん”, volume 1.

This boy is obviously younger, hence “shota”, but the manga doesn’t seem to be yankee per se, and not shota either for that matter, but rather trying to tap into the popularity of those genres, and of otaku culture in general, as a kind of smart and funny meta commentary. I just know that I love the cover!

I’ve also watched the first OVA of yankee anime Chameleon (カメレオン), which was quite fun.

What do you think about yankee manga? 

ヤンキー漫画についてどう考えますか?

Filed Under: Commercial, Research Tagged With: ヤンキー, ヤンキーショタ, 奥嶋ひろまさ, 星海ユミ

Manda Ringo shota survey: Ages

Twelve is the ideal shota age

2020-04-08 by ケイ Leave a Comment

In The Syotaroh (1996) Manda Ringo surveyed almost a hundred shota fans (63 women, 18 men, 1 okama) about their favourite age for a shota character. The respondents were mainly in their late teens and early twenties.

As you can see in the graph, there was a clear preference for age 12, followed by 13, with a certain span between 10 and 14, whereas popularity drops at 15 and 16.

The ages were calculated from the age span chosen by the respondent: If someone checked 13–15, then age 14 was used in the graph. If the user checked 12–13, age 12 was used if they also chose elementary schooler, but age 13 if they chose middle schooler. The preferred ages ranged from 3 to 30, with a median of 16.

This corresponds well with the results of my own interviews, which are partly published in Shota Ripōto 1. The age spans 10–14 (仁さん/Jin-san), 9–15 (大地くん/Daichi-kun), and 11–13 (タケルさん/Takeru-san) all center on 12, whereas 勇太さん/Yuuta-san (10–15) goes halfway up to 13 and an anonymous 27-year-old man centers on 13 (10–16). シンジさん/Shinji-san centers on 14 (12–16).

Favourite age span, from Shota Ripōto 1 (2020).

What’s your favourite age of shota boys?

Filed Under: Research Tagged With: Manda Ringo, まんだ林檎

Wataru

Wataru and the birth of shota in mainstream anime

2020-04-04 by ケイ 2 Comments

This is a summary of the rise of shota as a genre, as described in Watanabe Yumiko’s essay “Shota research” (ショタ研究), featured in Otakuology Annual 1998.

The 1981 anime Six God Combination Godmars (六神合体ゴッドマーズ) set off a male ✕ male boom and had yaoi established as a genre in the dōjinshi world.

1981 was also the year that Jump started serialising Captain Tsubasa (キャプテン翼), which is described as the very first “break” not only for yaoi but also for shota: For the first time, the female dōjinshi creators were older than their characters. In “Cappu Tsuba’s” (C翼) heyday in 1984-86, participation at Comic Market increased dramatically and women were in majority (whereas men had been in majority during the lolicon boom).

The yaoi boom peaked in 1986, when both Captain Tsubasa and Saint Seiya (聖闘士星矢) were broadcast as animes. The “male characters [made] by women boom” (女性による男性キャラブーム) was so influential that it even affected the content of Jump. However, shota was still not recognised as a genre of its own, although there were scattered series that obviously played into the burgeoning interest in young boys, such as Ganbare, kickers! (がんばれ!キッカーズ) and Mister Ajikko (ミスター味っ子).

Ikusabe Wataru shirtless in episode 11, 1988.

This all changed with the 1988 anime Mashin Hero Wataru (魔神英雄伝ワタル, Mashin Eiyūden Wataru), which Watanabe-san describes as a “shota trigger”. Previously, male characters had been tall and had long faces, but with Wataru, the protagonist was drawn as a cute boy with a smaller body, which was a “fresh” surprise for the viewers.

Wataru started out as a robot gag anime for children, but became an iconic shota series when Wataru’s rival Toraō (虎王) was introduced halfway through the series. (Episode 21 of 45 to be exact, as this is exactly where I am in my own watching as I’m writing this. In the English subtitles Toraō is called Tiger Prince.) The interaction between Wataru and Toraō captured the hearts of shotacons and awakened a general awareness of a “shota mind”; starting with Wataru, the “cute boy in shorts” character would become popular.

In summary, Watanabe-san argues that Wataru was the turning point that let shota break lose from yaoi and become a genre of its own.

Daichi in Mado King Granzort, 1989.

Building on the first era of shota, Wataru’s creator Sunrise Studios would continue to create robot animes aimed at children, most notably Mado King Granzort (魔動王グランゾート) from 1989.

Granzort is almost exactly like Wataru, but with amazing music, in my opinion, and Daichi is a bit older than Wataru, and he has a magic skateboard instead of magic roller skates.

Phoenix in his tanktop. Super Bikkuriman, episode 3, 1992.

Other animes that rode on the first shota wave:

  • 1990: Brave series (勇者シリーズ)
  • 1991: Matchless Raijin-Oh (絶対無敵ライジンオー) of the Eldran series (エルドランシリーズ)
  • 1992: Chō Dendō Robo Tetsujin 28-go FX (超電動ロボ 鉄人28号FX)
  • 1992: Super Bikkuriman (スーパービックリマン)
  • 1993: Nintama Rantarō (忍たま乱太郎)

Three works that attracted male shota fans

In 1994 the shota world changed in an instant by adding male fans to the female core of shota fans. This happened through these three animes:

  • Akazukin Chacha (赤ずきんチャチャ)
  • Brave Police J-Decker (勇者警察ジェイデッカー)
  • Yamato Takeru (ヤマトタケル)
Shiine-chan (left) and the more boyish boy Liya, in Akazukin Chacha, episode 2, 1994.

Akazukin Chacha was a shōjo anime, but which was watched by many non-shota men. However, the boy characters Shiine-chan, Yuuta-kun, and Loka in these series had a big effect on male shota fans, or maybe male fans in general.

What these characters had in common was something like “he’s a boy but he’s cute”, or “he is girl-like but it is in fact a boy” – which can be said to be the mysterious allure of shota. In addition, they were not hot-blooded types, but rather feminine, with healthy and cute features, which might have attracted male shota fans.

One should notice here that Watanabe-san writes about a certain kind of male shota fan. There are other male shota fans who like boys precisely because they are boyish and masculine. I think Watanabe-san’s interviewees, who call themselves “genuine” (真性) shotacons, belong to this group, and so do many of Shotaology’s readers. However, the genre’s popularity depended on a certain mainstream adoption which would not have been possible without the “male shota fans” that Watanabe-san writes about.

As shota gained clout as a genre, male shota fans founded the specialised dōjinshi event Shotaket, which had 80 circle participants and 700 general participants in 1998 – most of them men.

Shota’s momentum can be seen in the continuous spreading of hit works like:

  • 1995: Romeo’s Blue Skies (ロミオの青い空)
  • 1995: Neon Genesis Evangelion (新世紀エヴァンゲリオン)
  • 1996: Bakusō Kyōdai Let’s & Go!! (爆走兄弟レッツ&ゴー!!)
  • 1996: Detective Conan (名探偵コナン, “Case Closed”)
  • 1997: The King of Braves GaoGaiGar (勇者王ガオガイガー)
  • 1998: Bakusō Kyōdai Let’s & Go MAX (爆走兄弟レッツ&ゴーMAX)

And this was only Watanabe-san’s summary until 1998, when her essay was published! I’m not very knowledgeable in mainstream anime, but I would assume that works like Hunter ✕ Hunter show that the shota aesthetics continue to be spread and appreciated.

Maybe you can come up with more examples since 1998? Please comment!

Filed Under: Research Tagged With: Watanabe Yumiko

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Reference library

ショタコンのゆりかご (book cover)

ショタコンのゆりかご

Author: ぶどううり くすこ

An essay on the origins of shota, published as a dōjinshi.

国際おたく大学―1998年 最前線からの研究報告

国際おたく大学―1998年:最前線からの研究報告

Authors: 岡田 斗司夫, 渡辺 由美子

An anthology on “otakuology” that contains Watanabe Yumiko’s important shota study.

吉本たいまつ:腐男子にきく。

腐男子にきく。

Author: 吉本 たいまつ

An interview study on male fans of BL and yaoi, published as a dōjinshi.

The Syotaroh by まんだ 林檎

The Syotaroh

Author: まんだ 林檎

An impressive work on the early shota subculture.

エロマンガ・スタディーズ

エロマンガ・スタディーズ

Author: 永山 薫

One of the main resources on adult manga.

ショタリポート①

ショタリポート①

The first part of an interview study of shota fans.

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