This Week in Anime – Banned Together
Demonizing comics hasn’t gone out of style since 1954. Nick and Steve discuss the most recent round of bans of such horrifying series as Sasaki and Miyano to look at what book bans mean for manga today.
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Spoiler Warning for discussion of Sasaki and Miyano, Chainsaw Man, and How NOT to Summon a Demon Lord.
Alright, Steve, it’s time we talked about something important. Something that matters. Something controversial. We’re talking about MANGA BANS and I say we start with the big debate. I think Ban from Witch Watch is the best Ban, but Ban from The Seven Deadly Sins does have an edge with his certified slutty costume.
Steve
Sorry, Nick, while I wish we could talk more about the fun kind of Ban (and that’s quite a good jean skirt on the first example there), unfortunately, the topic du jour is a much more severe type. I’m talking about the bans they’ve got cooking down in Florida. And no, not the Ray-Bans either. The even worse kind.
I’m sure we can work something out. One of those “one for them, one for me” deals. Like, this week, we definitively solve the concentrated conservative effort to slap literary blinders on every single child in this country, and next week we can talk about thigh accessories.
Fine, let’s make it like Dabo Swinney and head down to the swamp. As if I don’t get enough of Florida just living in this humid affront to God.
But the Sasaki and Miyano inclusion helps highlight how dumb, polarized, and removed from reality things have gotten.
Insert a political compass joke here.
That’s Florida, baby. It’s a blatantly open-ended law designed to allow anyone and everyone to remove anything they dislike for baldly spurious reasons. This is why a BL manga ends up in the same restricted section as historically censored tomes as Slaughterhouse-Five and The Color Purple. It’s as absurd as it is stupid.
What is Australia if not the Florida of Earth?
There will be so many Aussies snarling over their vegemite and fairy bread when they read that.
Still, though, there’s something to be said about the often inscrutable and unchallengeable declarations of ratings entities like this. I’m not saying there’s an easy answer to how we age-gate and materialize as a global culture, but it’s always frustrating when the black box spits out a decree with no explanation.
There’s real power to be abused there, and that’s why, to get specific, I’m wary of any “cut-and-dried” declarations of sexual deviancy in art and literature. Not only is that subjective, but it’s often subject to the most regressive ideas of the people in power. If a school board thinks homosexuality is immoral, then any expression of it, no matter how fluffy or wholesome, is going to be treated like it’s depraved pornography. That’s the point of going after titles like Sasaki and Miyano. They want every iota of queerness stamped out.
The thing about rules is that kids and teens love to break them. Especially these days, where all but the strictest of parental controls on phones and computers can’t prevent the youth from seeing stuff they know they’re not supposed to.
I’m not a parent myself, so I’m not going to pretend to understand everything that goes into raising a child in the modern world. It seems daunting as hell. But I think the answer, more often than not, is going to lie in open dialogues. You can’t shield your kids’ eyes from everything, and there’s lots of stuff you shouldn’t shield them from. If I had a kid, I would hope they could read something like Sasaki and Miyano and learn, question, and grow thanks to it. That’s the kind of book we should be encouraging kids to read, not yanking it away from them.
Like many problems in America, the core culprit is a political class of ultraconservatives and their constituents, and their end goal is a Christian theocratic state that conforms precisely to their prejudices, all other beliefs and perspectives be damned. What’s happening in Florida is just a pilot program for what they want out of every other state. They want even the slightest expression of gender or sexual diversity to be equated with grooming and pedophilia. That’s why we can’t have measured debates about the merits of sensible rating systems. The well is so thoroughly poisoned as to be blatantly ridiculous to anybody with half a brain and/or heart. Yet here we are.
That one at least makes a little more sense, in that standards for sexual humor are pretty different between the US and Japan. I don’t agree with removing it, but I can imagine a reasonable parent seeing their 8-year-old reading gags about Roshi seeing Bulma’s vulva, and being scandalized.
That’s certainly a good thing! Activism against this kind of garbage is an important bulwark. At the same time, I think it’s also important for people to put more thought into the larger ramifications of how we discuss and disseminate art. To take it back to Chainsaw Man, amid the outcry over Asa and Denji’s Back-Alley Adventures, it was pretty off-putting how many people who were ostensibly on the side of responsible sexuality in media were parroting the arguments of the people insisting anime boys holding hands needs to stay in the bedroom and out of sight.
Similarly—and this is hardly a new debate either—arguments about the “right” kind of queer representation in media only serve the whims of people who want to eliminate that representation. There’s room for wholesome stories and there’s room for depraved ones. Both have value and appropriate contexts, and both benefit from the existence of the other. What one person finds disgusting, another might find illuminating or even life-saving. We all have to be cognizant of our inner cop.
As a rule of thumb, I don’t think any elected politician should be telling anyone what they can or can’t read. They didn’t go to school for that. I went to school for that. I have an English degree. Just ask me instead.
We are stalwart defenders of the anime industry’s right to churn out new isekai slurry every season. That’s what gets us our clicks on this column, after all. Everything has its purpose.
I mean at some point shutting down the Isekai Pipeline is more like sabotaging fossil fuel infrastructure, but this probably isn’t the column for that discussion.
True. I imagine DeSantis has already dispatched his cronies to your home anyway. You should get all your deviant anime contraband to a safe house, and we can reconvene next week to talk about ecoterrorism and/or leggy dragon ladies.