where did the term lolicon originated
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I have a question i been itching to get answered. however i also have a idea of the answer as well. i want to know what you guys think.
the majority of visitors here know about lolicon. my question is where did the term lolicon originated.
my guess is that it came from a 1950's novel called Lolita.
the majority of visitors here know about lolicon. my question is where did the term lolicon originated.
my guess is that it came from a 1950's novel called Lolita.
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Mr. Blonde wrote...
I have a question i been itching to get answered. however i also have a idea of the answer as well. i want to know what you guys think.the majority of visitors here know about lolicon. my question is where did the term lolicon originated.
my guess is that it came from a 1950's novel called Lolita.
japs
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Kaimax
Best Master-San
Everybody needds to read Wikipedia once in awhile.
and don't tell me that "everyone can edit it", but not everyone has the motivation to change it or even troll it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lolicon
The use of the term "Lolita complex" in Japan began in the early 1970s with the translation of Russell Trainer's The Lolita Complex. Shinji Wada used the word in his Stumbling upon a cabbage field (ã‚ャベツ畑ã§ã¤ã¾ã¥ã„ã¦, Kyabetsu-batake de tsumazuite?), an Alice in Wonderland manga parody in 1974.[22]
The "lolicon manga" genre closely related to manga media began with Hideo Azuma's works, such as The machine which came from the sea (æµ·ã‹ã‚‰æ¥ãŸæ©Ÿæ¢°, Umi kara kita Kikai?), in the early 1980s. Azuma had been publishing some sexual manga featuring girls in his own self-published magazine Cybele before that time.[23] Azuma's works became popular among schoolboy readers because most of the pornographic manga up until then had featured mature women influenced by gekiga, but Azuma's works are not pornographies in a strict sense though they contain many sexual elements. Following Azuma's success, some pornographic manga magazines, such as Manga Burikko and Lemon People, began featuring prepubescent girls. Throughout the 1980s, notable lolicon mangaka who published in these magazines include Nonki Miyasu, Kamui Fujiwara, Yoshito Asari and Aki Uchida.
and don't tell me that "everyone can edit it", but not everyone has the motivation to change it or even troll it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lolicon
wikipedia wrote...
OriginThe use of the term "Lolita complex" in Japan began in the early 1970s with the translation of Russell Trainer's The Lolita Complex. Shinji Wada used the word in his Stumbling upon a cabbage field (ã‚ャベツ畑ã§ã¤ã¾ã¥ã„ã¦, Kyabetsu-batake de tsumazuite?), an Alice in Wonderland manga parody in 1974.[22]
The "lolicon manga" genre closely related to manga media began with Hideo Azuma's works, such as The machine which came from the sea (æµ·ã‹ã‚‰æ¥ãŸæ©Ÿæ¢°, Umi kara kita Kikai?), in the early 1980s. Azuma had been publishing some sexual manga featuring girls in his own self-published magazine Cybele before that time.[23] Azuma's works became popular among schoolboy readers because most of the pornographic manga up until then had featured mature women influenced by gekiga, but Azuma's works are not pornographies in a strict sense though they contain many sexual elements. Following Azuma's success, some pornographic manga magazines, such as Manga Burikko and Lemon People, began featuring prepubescent girls. Throughout the 1980s, notable lolicon mangaka who published in these magazines include Nonki Miyasu, Kamui Fujiwara, Yoshito Asari and Aki Uchida.
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Kaimax wrote...
Everybody needds to read Wikipedia once in awhile.and don't tell me that "everyone can edit it", but not everyone has the motivation to change it or even troll it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lolicon
wikipedia wrote...
OriginThe use of the term "Lolita complex" in Japan began in the early 1970s with the translation of Russell Trainer's The Lolita Complex. Shinji Wada used the word in his Stumbling upon a cabbage field (ã‚ャベツ畑ã§ã¤ã¾ã¥ã„ã¦, Kyabetsu-batake de tsumazuite?), an Alice in Wonderland manga parody in 1974.[22]
The "lolicon manga" genre closely related to manga media began with Hideo Azuma's works, such as The machine which came from the sea (æµ·ã‹ã‚‰æ¥ãŸæ©Ÿæ¢°, Umi kara kita Kikai?), in the early 1980s. Azuma had been publishing some sexual manga featuring girls in his own self-published magazine Cybele before that time.[23] Azuma's works became popular among schoolboy readers because most of the pornographic manga up until then had featured mature women influenced by gekiga, but Azuma's works are not pornographies in a strict sense though they contain many sexual elements. Following Azuma's success, some pornographic manga magazines, such as Manga Burikko and Lemon People, began featuring prepubescent girls. Throughout the 1980s, notable lolicon mangaka who published in these magazines include Nonki Miyasu, Kamui Fujiwara, Yoshito Asari and Aki Uchida.
yes I agree with that statement but the name was introduced to the manga universe in the 70's. I would also find it to much of a coincidence that Russell Trainer used the word Lolita in his naming of his theory.