Lolicon
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In Japanese popular culture, is a genre of fictional media in which young (or young-looking) girl characters appear in romantic or sexual contexts. The term, a
portmanteau A portmanteau word, or portmanteau (, ) is a blend of wordsLolita complex", also refers to desire and affection for such characters (, "loli"), and fans of such characters and works. Associated with unrealistic and stylized imagery within
manga Manga ( Japanese: 漫画 ) are comics or graphic novels originating from Japan. Most manga conform to a style developed in Japan in the late 19th century, and the form has a long prehistory in earlier Japanese art. The term ''manga'' is ...
,
anime is Traditional animation, hand-drawn and computer animation, computer-generated animation originating from Japan. Outside of Japan and in English, ''anime'' refers specifically to animation produced in Japan. However, in Japan and in Japane ...
, and video games, ''lolicon'' in '' otaku'' (manga/anime fan) culture is understood as distinct from desires for realistic depictions of girls, or real girls as such, and is associated with the concept of '' moe'', or feelings of affection and love for fictional characters as such (often cute characters in manga and anime). The phrase "Lolita complex", derived from the novel '' Lolita'', entered use in Japan in the 1970s, when sexual imagery of the ''shōjo'' (idealized young girl) was expanding in the country's media. During the "''lolicon'' boom" in adult manga of the early 1980s, the term was adopted in the nascent ''otaku'' culture to denote attraction to early '' bishōjo'' (cute girl) characters, and later to only younger-looking depictions as ''bishōjo'' designs became more varied. The artwork of the boom, strongly influenced by the round styles of ''shōjo'' manga (marketed to girls), marked a shift from previous realism and the advent of "cute eroticism" ('' kawaii ero''), an aesthetic now common in manga and anime more broadly. The ''lolicon'' boom faded by the mid-1980s, and the genre has since made up a minority of erotic manga. A
moral panic A moral panic is a widespread feeling of fear, often an irrational one, that some evil person or thing threatens the values, interests, or well-being of a community or society. It is "the process of arousing social concern over an issue", us ...
against "harmful manga" in the 1990s has made ''lolicon'' a keyword in manga debates in Japan. Child pornography laws in some countries include depictions of fictional child characters, while those in other countries, including Japan, do not. Opponents and supporters have debated if the genre contributes to child sexual abuse. Cultural critics generally identify ''lolicon'' with a broader separation between fiction and reality in ''otaku'' sexuality.


Definition and scope

''Lolicon'' is a Japanese
portmanteau A portmanteau word, or portmanteau (, ) is a blend of wordsLolita complex" (, ''rorīta konpurekkusu''), an English-language phrase derived from Vladimir Nabokov's novel '' Lolita'' (1955) but in Japan more associated with Russell Trainer's ''The Lolita Complex'' (1966, translated 1969), a work of pop psychology in which the author uses the term to describe adult male attraction to pubescent and pre-pubescent females. In Japanese, the phrase was adopted to describe feelings of love and lust for young girls over adult women, which remains the phrase's common meaning. Due to its association with '' otaku'' (
manga Manga ( Japanese: 漫画 ) are comics or graphic novels originating from Japan. Most manga conform to a style developed in Japan in the late 19th century, and the form has a long prehistory in earlier Japanese art. The term ''manga'' is ...
and
anime is Traditional animation, hand-drawn and computer animation, computer-generated animation originating from Japan. Outside of Japan and in English, ''anime'' refers specifically to animation produced in Japan. However, in Japan and in Japane ...
fan) culture, however, the term today is more often used to describe desires for young or young-looking girl characters (, "loli") which are generally understood to exist and be satisfied in fiction, though the meaning of the term remains contested and for the public at large still carries a connotation of pedophilia. ''Lolicon'' also refers to sexualized works which feature such characters, and fans of these works and characters. It is distinct from words for pedophilia (''yōji-zuki'' or ''pedofiria''; clinically, ''shōniseiai'' or ''jidōseiai'') and
child pornography Child pornography (also called CP, child sexual abuse material, CSAM, child porn, or kiddie porn) is pornography that unlawfully exploits children for sexual stimulation. It may be produced with the direct involvement or sexual assault of a ...
(''jidō poruno''). The meaning of ''lolicon'' in the ''otaku'' context developed in the early 1980s, during the "''lolicon'' boom" in adult manga (see ). According to editor and critic Akira Akagi, the term's meaning moved away from the sexual pairing of an older man and a young girl, and instead came to describe desire for "cuteness" and "girl-ness" in manga and anime. Other critics defined ''lolicon'' as the desire for "cute things", "manga-like" or "anime-like" characters, "roundness", and the "two-dimensional", as opposed to "real". At the time, all eroticism in the manga style featuring cute girl ('' bishōjo'') characters was associated with the term, and synonyms of "Lolita complex" included " two-dimensional complex" (''nijigen konpurekkusu''), "two-dimensional fetishism" (''nijikon fechi''), "two-dimensional syndrome" (''nijikon shōkōgun''), "cute girl syndrome" (''bishōjo shōkōgun''), and simply "sickness" (''byōki''). As character body types in erotic manga became more varied by the end of the ''lolicon'' boom, the scope of the term narrowed to more young-looking depictions. ''Lolicon'' became a keyword in debates after the 1989 arrest of Tsutomu Miyazaki, a serial killer of young girls who was portrayed in media reports as an ''otaku'' (see ). As ''lolicon'' was conflated with desire for real children in debates on "harmful manga", the early meaning was replaced among ''otaku'' by '' moe'', which refers to feelings of affection and love for characters more generally. Like ''moe'', ''lolicon'' is still used by ''otaku'' to refer to attraction that is consciously distinct from reality; some ''otaku'' identify as "two-dimensional ''lolicon''" (''nijigen rorikon'') to clarify their attraction to characters. The term has become a keyword in criticism of manga and sexuality within Japan, as well as globally with the spread of Japanese popular culture.


History


Background

In the 1970s, ''shōjo'' manga (marketed to girls) underwent a renaissance in which artists experimented with new narratives and styles, and introduced themes such as psychology, gender, and sexuality. These developments attracted adult male fans of ''shōjo'' manga, who crossed gendered boundaries to produce and consume it. The first appearance of the term "Lolita complex" in manga was in ''Stumbling Upon a Cabbage Patch'', an '' Alice in Wonderland''–inspired work by Shinji Wada published in the June 1974 issue of the ''shōjo'' manga magazine '' Bessatsu Margaret'', where a male character calls
Lewis Carroll Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (; 27 January 1832 – 14 January 1898), better known by his pen name Lewis Carroll, was an English author, poet and mathematician. His most notable works are '' Alice's Adventures in Wonderland'' (1865) and its sequ ...
a man with a "strange character of liking only small children" in an inside joke to adult readers. Early ''lolicon'' artwork was influenced by male artists mimicking ''shōjo'' manga, as well as erotic manga created by female artists for male readers. The image of the ''shōjo'' (young girl) became dominant in Japanese mass media by the 1970s as an idealization of cuteness, innocence, and an "idealized Eros", attributes which became attached to imagery of younger girls over time. Nude photographs of ''shōjo'', conceived as
fine art In European academic traditions, fine art is developed primarily for aesthetics or creative expression, distinguishing it from decorative art or applied art, which also has to serve some practical function, such as pottery or most metalwor ...
, gained popularity: a photo collection entitled was published in 1969, and in 1972 and 1973 there was an "Alice boom" in nude photos themed around ''Alice in Wonderland''. Specialty adult magazines carrying nude photos, fiction, and essays on the appeal of young girls emerged in the 1980s; this trend faded in the late 1980s, due to backlash and because many men preferred images of ''shōjo'' in manga and anime. The spread of such imagery, both in photographs and in manga, may have been helped by prohibitions on displaying pubic hair under Japan's obscenity laws.


1970s–1980s

The rise of ''lolicon'' as a genre began at Comiket (Comic Market), a convention for the sale of ''
dōjinshi , also romanized as ', 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 ...
'' (self-published works) founded in 1975 by adult male fans of ''shōjo'' manga; in 1979, a group of male artists published the first issue of the fanzine ', whose standout work was an erotic parody of ''
Little Red Riding Hood "Little Red Riding Hood" is a European fairy tale about a young girl and a sly wolf. Its origins can be traced back to several pre-17th century European folk tales. The two best known versions were written by Charles Perrault and the Bro ...
'' by Hideo Azuma, known as a pioneer of ''lolicon''. Prior to ''Cybele'', the dominant style in ''seinen'' (marketed to men) and pornographic manga was '' gekiga'', characterized by realism, sharp angles, dark hatching, and gritty linework. Azuma's work, in contrast, displayed light shading and clean, circular lines, which he saw as "thoroughly erotic" and sharing with ''shōjo'' manga a "lack of reality". Azuma's combination of the stout bodies of Osamu Tezuka's manga and the emotive faces of ''shōjo'' manga marked the advent of the ''bishōjo'' character and the aesthetic of "cute eroticism" (''kawaii ero''). While erotic, Azuma's manga was also viewed as humorous and parodic; only a minority of readers found his style erotic at first, but a large fan base soon grew in response to the alternative to pornographic ''gekiga'' that it represented. Erotic manga mostly moved away from combining realistic bodies and cartoony faces towards a wholly-unrealistic style. ''Lolicon'' manga played a role in attracting male fans to Comiket, an event originally dominated by women (90 percent of participants were female at its first run in 1975); in 1981, the number of male and female participants was equal. ''Lolicon'', mostly created by and for men, served as a response to '' yaoi'' (manga featuring male homoeroticism), mostly created by and for women. The early 1980s saw a "''lolicon'' boom" in professional and amateur art. The popularity of ''lolicon'' within the '' otaku'' community would attract the attention of publishers with the creation of specialty publications dedicated to the genre, including '' Lemon People'' (1982) and '' Manga Burikko'' (1982). ''Lemon People'' in particular was one of the first ''lolicon'' manga magazines published in Japan, with the first issue's cover stating that it "had the monopoly on ''lolicon'' comic content in 1982", expressing the excitement over the word ''lolicon'' itself. Other magazines of the boom included , ''Melon Comic'', and '. The genre's rise was closely linked to the concurrent development of ''otaku'' culture and growing fan consciousness; the word ''otaku'' itself was coined in ''Burikko'' in 1983. Originally founded as an unprofitable ''gekiga'' magazine, the publication was transformed into a ''lolicon'' magazine in 1983 by editor Eiji Ōtsuka, whose intention was to publish "''shōjo'' manga for boys". Artwork in the magazine continued the trend started by Azuma rooted in the soft styles of ''shōjo'' manga, with less realism and fewer explicit depictions of sex; in November 1983, ''Burikko'' editors yielded to reader demands by removing photographs of gravure idol models from its opening pages, printing an issue with the subtitle "Totally ''Bishōjo'' Comic Magazine". ''Lolicon'' magazines regularly published female artists, such as Kyoko Okazaki and Erika Sakurazawa, and male artists such as , the "King of ''Lolicon''", who produced 160 pages of manga per month to meet demand. Uchiyama's works were published in both niche magazines such as ''Lemon People'' and in the mainstream '' Shōnen Champion''. The first-ever pornographic anime series was '' Lolita Anime'', released episodically in 1984–1985. Iconic characters of the boom include Clarisse from the film '' Lupin III: Castle of Cagliostro'' (1979) and Lana from the TV series '' Future Boy Conan'' (1978), both directed by Hayao Miyazaki. Clarisse was especially popular, and inspired a series of articles discussing her appeal in the anime specialty magazines , , and ''
Animage is a Japanese anime and entertainment magazine which Tokuma Shoten began publishing in July 1978. Hayao Miyazaki's internationally renowned manga, '' Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind'', was serialized in ''Animage'' from 1982 through 1994. ...
'', as well as a trend of fan works (dubbed "Clarisse magazines") that were not explicitly sexual, but instead "fairytale-esque" and "girly". Many early ''lolicon'' works combined mecha and ''bishōjo'' elements; Kaoru Nagayama highlights the premiere of the ''Daicon III Opening Animation'' at the 1981 Japan SF Convention as a notable example of the link between science fiction and ''lolicon'' in the nascent ''otaku'' culture of the time. Anime shows targeted at young girls with young girl heroines, such as ''
Magical Princess Minky Momo is a Japanese magical-girl anime franchise by Ashi Productions. The original series ran between 1982 and 1983 on TV Tokyo and inspired three OVAs between 1985 and 1987. A second television series, titled , ran on NTV between 1991 and ...
'' (1982–1983), gained new viewership from adult male fans, who started fan clubs and were courted by creators. Helen McCarthy suggests that ''lolicon'' anime is rooted in magical girl shows such as ''Minky Momo'', where transforming heroines can blur lines between girls and women. While the ''lolicon'' boom in commercial erotic manga only lasted until 1984, it marked the beginning of its now-dominant ''bishōjo'' style. Near the end of the boom, because "readers had no attachment to ''lolicon'' per se" and "did not take oung girlsas objects of sexual desire", a majority of readers and creators of erotic manga moved towards the diversifying ''bishōjo'' works featuring "baby-faced and big-breasted" characters, which were no longer considered ''lolicon''. At Comiket, ''lolicon'' manga had declined in popularity by 1989 with developments in erotic ''dōjinshi'', including new genres of fetishism and the growing popularity of softcore eroticism popular among men and women, particularly in ''
yuri Yuri may refer to: People and fictional characters Given name *Yuri (Slavic name), the Slavic masculine form of the given name George, including a list of people with the given name Yuri, Yury, etc. * Yuri (Japanese name), also Yūri, feminine Ja ...
'' (manga with lesbian themes).


1990s–present

In 1989, ''lolicon'' and ''otaku'' became the subject of a media frenzy and
moral panic A moral panic is a widespread feeling of fear, often an irrational one, that some evil person or thing threatens the values, interests, or well-being of a community or society. It is "the process of arousing social concern over an issue", us ...
after the arrest of Tsutomu Miyazaki, a young man who had kidnapped and murdered four girls between the ages of four and seven and committed sexual acts with their corpses. Widely disseminated photos of Miyazaki's room revealed an extensive collection of video tapes, which included horror/slasher films on which he had modelled some of his crimes, and manga, including ''shōjo'' and ''lolicon'' works. In the extended public debates that followed, Miyazaki's crimes were blamed on supposed media effects: namely, a reduction in his inhibitions to crime, and a blurring of the lines between fiction and reality. Miyazaki was labelled as an ''otaku'', and an image of ''otaku'' as "socially and sexually immature" men, and for some as "pedophiles and potential predators", was established for much of the public. The decade saw local crackdowns on retailers and publishers of "harmful manga", and the arrests of some ''dōjinshi'' artists. Despite this, ''lolicon'' imagery expanded and became more acceptable within manga in the 1990s, and the early 2000s saw a small boom in the genre sparked by the magazine '' Comic LO''.


Media

''Lolicon'' media is loosely defined. Some define its characters by age, while others define its characters by appearance (those that are small and flat-chested, independent of age). ''Lolicon'' works often depict girl characters as innocent, precocious, and sometimes flirtatious; characters may appear in borderline or outright sexual situations, though the term can be applied to works with neither (see ). According to Kaoru Nagayama, manga readers define ''lolicon'' works as those "with a heroine younger than a middleschool student", a definition which can vary from characters under age 18 for "society at large", to characters "younger than gradeschool-aged" for "fanatics", and to "kindergarteners" for "more pedophiliac readers". Elisabeth Klar observes that girl characters in ''lolicon'' can show an "contradictory performance of age" in which their body, behavior, and role in a story conflict; an example is the ''roribabā'' ("Lolita granny") archetype, a girl character who speaks with the mannerisms of an old woman. Curvy hips and other secondary sex characteristics similarly appear as features in some of the genre's characters. Plot devices often explain the young appearance of characters who are non-human or actually much older. ''Lolicon'' manga, often published as ''dōjinshi'' or compiled in anthology magazines, is mostly consumed by male audiences, though Nagayama notes that the works of have "resonated with female readers" and "earned the support of women". Other notable artists include Aguda Wanyan and Takarada Gorgeous. Female creators of ''lolicon'' works include Erika Wada and . ''Lolicon'' imagery is a prominent theme in Superflat, a manga-influenced contemporary art movement founded by Takashi Murakami. Prominent Superflat artists whose works feature ''lolicon'' imagery include
Mr. ''Mister'', usually written in its contracted form ''Mr.'' or ''Mr'', is a commonly used English honorific for men without a higher honorific, or professional title, or any of various designations of office. The title 'Mr' derived from earlier ...
and Henmaru Machino. Murakami himself did a ''lolicon''-inspired photoshoot with Britney Spears for the cover of the magazine
Pop Pop or POP may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Music * Pop music, a musical genre Artists * POP, a Japanese idol group now known as Gang Parade * Pop!, a UK pop group * Pop! featuring Angie Hart, an Australian band Albums * ''Pop'' ( ...
.


Relation to ''moe''

In the 1990s, ''lolicon'' imagery evolved and contributed to the mainstream development of '' moe'', the generalized affective response to fictional characters (typically ''bishōjo'' characters in manga, anime, and computer games) and its associated design elements. The ''bishōjo'' character form moved from niche, ''otaku'' publications to mainstream manga magazines, and saw explosive popularity in the decade with the rise of ''bishōjo'' games and anime series such as '' Sailor Moon'' and '' Neon Genesis Evangelion'', which pioneered media and merchandising based on fan affection for their female protagonists. ''Moe'' characters, which tend to be physically immature girl characters exemplified by cuteness, are ubiquitous in contemporary manga and anime. In contrast to ''lolicon'' works, sexuality in ''moe'' is treated indirectly or not at all; the ''moe'' response is often defined with emphasis on platonic love. John Oppliger of '' AnimeNation'' identifies '' Ro-Kyu-Bu!'', ''
Kodomo no Jikan is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kaworu Watashiya. The story revolves around a grade school teacher named Daisuke Aoki, whose main problem is that one of his students, Rin Kokonoe, has a crush on him. It was seriali ...
'', and '' Moetan'' as examples of series which challenge the distinction between ''moe'' and ''lolicon'' through use of sexual innuendo, commenting that they "satire the chaste sanctity of the ''moé'' phenomenon" and "poke fun at viewers and the arbitrary delineations that viewers assert". "''Moe''-style" ''lolicon'' works depict mild eroticism, such as glimpses of underwear, and forgo explicit sex.


Genre features

Akira Akagi identified five themes in ''lolicon'' manga in 1993: sadomasochism, "groping objects" (alien tentacles or robots in the role of the penis), "mecha fetishes" (combinations of a machine and a girl), erotic parodies of mainstream anime and manga, and "simply indecent or perverted stuff", also noting common themes of lesbianism and masturbation. Media scholar Setsu Shigematsu argues that these forms of substitution and mimicry enable ''lolicon'' to "transform straight sex into a parodic form". More extreme works depict themes including coercion, rape, incest,
bondage Bondage may refer to: Restraints *Physical restraints **Bondage (BDSM) Bondage in the BDSM subculture, is the practice of consensually tying, binding, or restraining a partner for erotic, aesthetic, or somatosensory stimulation. A partn ...
, and hermaphroditism. Nagayama argues that most pornographic ''lolicon'' manga deal with a "consciousness of sin", or a sense of taboo and guilt in its consumption. Some manga manage this by portraying the girl as enjoying the experience in the end, while others represent the girl as the active partner in sex who seduces men to her. Other ''lolicon'' manga, where "men are absolute evil and girls are pitiable victims", indulge in the "pleasure of sin" through the breaking of taboos, which he argues affirms the fragility of the characters. He posits that manga depicting sex between children avoid the "consciousness of sin" via mutual innocence, while also thematizing nostalgia and an idealized past, while other ''lolicon'' manga accomplish this through characters with especially unrealistic and ''moe'' designs, where "it is precisely because fiction is distinguished from reality as fiction that one can experience ''moe''".


Legality and censorship

Child pornography laws in some countries, including United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia, have expanded since the 1990s to include sexually explicit depictions of fictional child characters, while those in other countries, including Japan and the United States, exclude fiction from relevant definitions. In 1999, Japan passed a national law criminalizing the production and distribution of child pornography. The law's original draft included depictions of fictional children in its definition of child pornography; after "criticism from many in Japan", this text was removed in the final version. In 2014, Japan's parliament amended the 1999 law to criminalize possession of child pornography; the 2013 draft introduced by the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which maintained the existing legal definition, included a provision for a government investigation on whether manga, anime, and computer-generated images "similar to child pornography" were connected to child sexual abuse, which would be followed by a later decision on regulation. This provision was opposed by anime and manga artist and publishing associations, which argued that regulation would infringe on
freedom of expression Freedom of speech is a principle that supports the freedom of an individual or a community to articulate their opinions and ideas without fear of retaliation, censorship, or legal sanction. The right to freedom of expression has been recog ...
and negatively impact the creative industry and cited a lack of existing evidence linking fiction and crime. The provision was removed from the law's final version, which took effect in 2015. ''Lolicon'' media is a common target of local ordinances in Japan which restrict distribution of materials designated "harmful to the healthy development of youth", which were strengthened throughout the 1990s and 2000s. An amendment proposed in 2010 to the Tokyo law on material banned from sale to minors (described by Vice Governor Naoki Inose as targeting non-pornographic ''lolicon'' manga, writing that "We had regulation for ''eromanga'', but not for ''lolicon''") restricted depictions of "non-existent youths" who appeared under age 18 and were portrayed in "anti-social sexual situations". Under massive opposition from manga creators, academics, and fans, the bill was rejected in June 2010 by Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly; however, a revision passed in December 2010 which restricts "manga, anime, and computer games" where any characters engage in "sexual or pseudo sexual acts that would be illegal in real life" depicted in a way that "glorifies or exaggerates" such acts. In 2011, several manga were listed for restriction, including ' ("My Wife Is an Elementary Student"), which had been previously criticized on television by Inose. It was later published online by
J-Comi , before 2018 known as , is a Japanese website that distributes out of print manga and doujinshi as DRM-free ebooks, with the permission of the authors and supported by advertising. J-Comi is limited to out of print titles so that quality of the w ...
, avoiding restriction. Sexualized depictions of young girl characters have also been subject to censorship and restriction outside of Japan. In 2006, North American publisher Seven Seas Entertainment licensed the manga series ''
Kodomo no Jikan is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kaworu Watashiya. The story revolves around a grade school teacher named Daisuke Aoki, whose main problem is that one of his students, Rin Kokonoe, has a crush on him. It was seriali ...
'' for release under the title ''Nymphet'', but cancelled its plans in 2007 after vendor cancellations. In a statement, the company noted that the manga "cannot be considered appropriate for the US market by any reasonable standard". In 2020, Australian senator
Stirling Griff Stirling Griff (born 2 December 1957) is an Australian former politician who was a Senator for South Australia from 2016 to 2022, representing the Nick Xenophon Team and Centre Alliance. His party changed its name from Nick Xenophon Team (NXT) l ...
criticized the Australian Classification Board for giving ratings to manga and anime depicting "child exploitation", and called for a review of classification regulations; later in the year, the board banned the import and sale of three volumes of the light novel series '' No Game No Life'' for sexualized depiction of young characters. Some online platforms, including Discord and
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, ban ''lolicon'' content.


Debate

Explaining the exclusion of ''lolicon'' from the 2014 amendment to Japan's child pornography laws, an LDP lawmaker stated that "Manga, anime, and CG child pornography don't directly violate the rights of girls or boys. It has not been scientifically validated that it even indirectly causes damage. Since it hasn't been validated, punishing people who view it would go too far;" his statement echoes activist arguments. Statistically, sexual abuse of minors in Japan has declined since the 1960s and 1970s while the prevalence of fictional ''lolicon'' has increased; Patrick W. Galbraith interprets this as evidence that ''lolicon'' imagery does not necessarily influence crimes and argues that lolicon characters do not necessarily represent real boys or girls, but rather what McLelland calls a "third gender." while Steven Smet suggests that ''lolicon'' is an "exorcism of fantasies" that contributes to Japan's low crime rates. Galbraith further argues that ''otaku'' culture collectively promotes a media literacy and ethical position of separating fiction and reality, especially when the conflation of the two would be dangerous. Drawing on his fieldwork as an anthropologist, he writes that the sexual imagination of ''otaku'', including ''lolicon'', "did not lead to 'immoral acts', but rather ethical activity". A 2012 report by the Sexologisk Klinik for the Danish government found no evidence that cartoons and drawings depicting fictive child sexual abuse encourage real abuse. Academic Sharalyn Orbaugh argues that manga depicting underage sexuality can help victims of child sexual abuse to work through their own trauma, and that there is greater harm in regulating sexual expression than potential harm caused by such manga. Legal scholar Hiroshi Nakasatomi argues that ''lolicon'' can distort readers' sexual desires and induce crime, and that it violates the rights of children, a view shared by the non-profit organization CASPAR (founded after the Miyazaki case). Some critics, such as the non-profit organization Lighthouse, claim that ''lolicon'' works can be used for child grooming, and that they engender a culture that is accepting of sexual abuse. Guidelines released in 2019 by the United Nations Human Rights Committee encouraged state parties to include explicit drawings of fictional children in laws against child pornography, "in particular when such representations are used as part of a process to sexually exploit children". Feminist critic Kuniko Funabashi argues that ''lolicon'' manga contributes to sexual violence by portraying girls passively and by "presenting the female body as the man's possession". Legal scholar Shin'ichirō Harata argues that child pornography laws should not collapse reality and fiction together, but also that fans should not dismiss an ambivalence represented by ''lolicon''. He describes the practice of keeping the two separated as the "ethics of ''moe''", or "responsibility of ''otaku''". Dilton Rocha Ferraz Ribeiro analyzes the debate over the legal status of ''lolicon'' works in Japan and finds that both the pro-regulation and anti-regulation coalitions are relatively stable, with each reacting to actions by the other coalition. Catherine Driscoll and Liam Grealy argue that these debates, including international pressure on Japan to regulate these works, create a "discourse of Japanese exceptionalism" to international norms.


Critical commentary

Cultural critics responding to ''lolicon'' generally emphasize it as distinct from attraction to real young girls. Anthropologist Patrick W. Galbraith finds that "from early writings to the present, researchers suggest that ''lolicon'' artists are playing with symbols and working with tropes, which does not reflect or contribute to sexual pathology or crime". Psychologist
Tamaki Saitō is a Japanese psychologist and critic. He specializes in the psychiatry of puberty and adolescence. Saitō is Director of Medical Service at Sofukai Sasaki Hospital in Funabashi, Chiba. Saitō is notable for his study of ''hikikomori'', a ter ...
, who has conducted clinical work with ''otaku'', highlights the estrangement of ''lolicon'' desires from reality as part of a strict distinction for ''otaku'' between "textual and actual sexuality", and observes that "the vast majority of ''otaku'' are not pedophiles in actual life". Manga researcher
Yukari Fujimoto is a manga researcher and professor of global Japanese studies at Meiji University. She was born in Kumamoto Prefecture. She was an editor for Chikuma Shobō. She is a manga critic, gender theorist, family theorist, current events critic, author, ...
argues that ''lolicon'' desire "is not for a child, but for the image itself", and that this is understood by those "brought up in apan'sculture of drawing and fantasy". Cultural historian Mark McLelland identifies ''lolicon'' and ''yaoi'' as "self-consciously anti-realist" genres, given a rejection by fans and creators of "three-dimensionality" in favor of "two-dimensionality", and compares ''lolicon'' to the ''yaoi'' fandom, in which largely female and heterosexual fans consume depictions of male homosexuality which "lack any correspondent in the real world". Setsu Shigematsu argues that ''lolicon'' reflects a shift in "erotic investment" from reality to "two-dimensional figures of desire". Most scholars also identify ''lolicon'' as a form of self-expression on the part of its male creators and consumers. Sociologist Sharon Kinsella suggests that for ''lolicon'' fans, "the infantilized female object of desire ..has crossed over to become an aspect of their own self image and sexuality". Akira Akagi argues that ''lolicon'' manga represented a notable shift in reader identification from the "hero" penetrator common to pornographic ''gekiga'': "''Lolicon'' readers do not need a penis for pleasure, but rather they need the ecstasy of the girl. ..They identify with the girl, and get caught up in a masochistic pleasure." Manga critic Gō Itō views this as an "abstract desire", quoting ''lolicon'' artist who told him that "he was the girl who is raped in his manga", reflecting a feeling of being "raped by society, or by the world". Kaoru Nagayama posits that ''lolicon'' readers adopt a fluid perspective that alternates between that of an omniscient voyeur and the multiple characters in a work, reflecting an active reader role and a projection onto girl characters. Writing in ''The Book of Otaku'' (1989), feminist
Chizuko Ueno is a Japanese sociologist and Japan's "best-known feminist". Her work covers sociological issues including semiotics, capitalism, and feminism in Japan. Ueno is known for the quality, polarizing nature, and accessibility of her work. Early lif ...
argued that ''lolicon'', as an orientation towards fictional ''bishōjo'', is "completely different from pedophilia", and characterized it as a desire to "be part of the 'cute' world of ''shōjo''" for male fans of ''shōjo'' manga who "find it too much to be a man". Several scholars identify the emergence of ''lolicon'' with changes in Japanese gender relations. Sociologist Kimio Itō attributes the rise of ''lolicon'' manga to a shift in the 1970s and 1980s, when boys, driven by a feeling that girls were "surpassing them in terms of willpower and action", turned to the "world of imagination", in which young girl characters are "easy to control". Kinsella interprets ''lolicon'' as part of a "gaze of both fear and desire" stimulated by the growing power of women in society, and as a reactive desire to see the ''shōjo'' "infantilized, undressed, and subordinate". Media scholar Chizuko Naitō views ''lolicon'' as reflecting a "societal desire in a broader sense" for young girls as sex symbols in Japan (which she calls a "loliconized society"). Christine Yano argues that eroticized imagery of the ''shōjo'', "real or fictive", reflects "heteronormative pedophilia" in which emphasis is placed on the ephemerality of childhood: "it is ''as child'' that
he ''shōjo'' He or HE may refer to: Language * He (pronoun), an English pronoun * He (kana), the romanization of the Japanese kana へ * He (letter), the fifth letter of many Semitic alphabets * He (Cyrillic), a letter of the Cyrillic script called ''He'' in ...
becomes precious as a transitory figure threatened by impending adulthood". Responding in 1982 to the popularity of Clarisse from his film ''Lupin III: Castle of Cagliostro'', Hayao Miyazaki criticized artists and fans who idolized her in what he considered a demeaning manner, and said that he "hate men who use the word ''lolicon''." Despite his apparent rejection, Saitō and Galbraith still find connections between Miyazaki and desire for young girl characters. Interpreting Miyazaki's own words and his acknowledgment of eroticism as key to his creative process, Galbraith suggests that the distance between Miyazaki and the ''lolicon'' boom was about "shame": he criticized men who were open and playful about ''lolicon'' desire for having little shame, while he felt embarrassment about his own "longing" for girl characters.


See also

*
Hentai Hentai is anime and manga pornography. A loanword from Japanese, the original term ( ) does not describe a genre of media, but rather an abnormal sexual desire or act, as an abbreviation of . In addition to anime and manga, hentai works exi ...
– anime and manga pornography * Junior idol – child or early teenager pursuing a career as a photographic model * Lolita fashion – Japanese fashion style and subculture * '' Shotacon'' – male equivalent of ''lolicon'', focusing on young boy characters * Simulated child pornography – produced without direct involvement of children


Notes


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Further reading

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External links

* {{Japanese erotic cinema 1970s neologisms Animation controversies Anime and manga controversies Anime and manga genres Anime and manga terminology Female stock characters in anime and manga Hentai Japanese sex terms Obscenity controversies in animation Obscenity controversies in comics Obscenity controversies in video games Pedophilia Wasei-eigo Girls