🐱 Anime Is for Black Girls Too

CatParty


When manga genius Jacque Ayewas growing up in a small Kansas town, she hid her love of anime and other “nerdy” interests because she worried they wouldn’t be accepted by her friends. But after years of suppressing who she was while also navigating microaggressions, she realized the truths that fueled her fascination with shows like Sailor Moon and Pokémon.

She liked anime even if, as she says of her time back then, “Black people who like weird stuff aren’t usually accepted.” Aye eventually grew to accept herself. The isolation of being raised in a White town and loving Japanese-style animated cartoons eventually led to an $18,000 Kickstarter campaign and the creation of Adorned by Chi, Aye’s Japanese-style comic book series featuring melanin-rich characters. Aye created a universe where five brown-skinned university students in Nigeria discover they have goddess-like powers.

“I wanted them to be Nigerian and Igbo because Yoruba culture is always shown,” says Aye, who is of Nigerian heritage. “African beliefs aren’t given respect and celebration. Why don’t our gods and goddesses get the same treatment as Greek mythology? I include Igbo goddesses as part of the storyline.”

And that was just in 2018. Aye’s manga — comic books that mimic a specific Japanese artistic style — have since attracted the attention of Sanrio of Hello Kitty fame with whom Aye has produced a capsule collection of size-inclusive tees and sweatshirts. Aye has also inked a development deal with Madison Wells for comics, merchandise, film, and TV. Adorned by Chi is now a six-figure lifestyle business that includes five different manga series, tees with sayings like “Pretty Girls Like Anime” and “Anime Baddie,” hoodies, totes, water bottles, and a horror-comedy book in development.

Adorned by Chi’s main character, Adaeze, is a cocoa-skinned cutie who wears a short ’fro, has extreme social anxiety, and doesn’t think anybody likes her.

“She cries all the time; she’s definitely me,” says Aye, laughing. “Her magical girl power is empathy. Adaeze can tap into others’ feelings and manipulate them by projecting her own.”

This sort of manga is popular among Black people because, Aye says, we can relate.

“I think it’s because most anime protagonists are underdogs, shunned by society and treated unfairly or just underestimated,” Aye explains. “But these characters wield a great power or great knowledge. I think Black people see ourselves in them.”

The Japanese art form was introduced to the U.S. in the 1950s, but its origins in Japan began in the 12th and 13th centuries. On the U.S. side of things, Astro Boy and Speed Racer were popular 1950s and 1960s cartoons that showcased this distinct style of illustration. Since then, every decade has welcomed a new generation of Americans who embrace manga, from the comics that include the original Transformers and Voltron on up to more modern embraces like Dragon Balland Fullmetal Alchemist that are showcased in broader pop culture, including hip-hop verses by Wu-Tang Clan, Kanye West, and Joey Badass. Actors Michael B. Jordan and Samuel L. Jackson have openly discussed their admiration for anime, with Jackson voicing the lead character for the now-classic Afro Samurai anime TV series, which was released in 2007.

Despite some stereotypical racism within the overall genre, Adorned by Chi has earned loyal fans eager for characters that reflect Black faces and culture. Still, it’s been a long road to success. Aye remembers being young and awkward and knowing she was expected to embrace a pre-med college life.

“There wasn’t a lot to do; there wasn’t a lot of melanin or any kind of flavor,” Aye says of her hometown in Kansas. “There just wasn’t much diversity at all.”

Aye was also shy and sensitive, and she didn’t tell her parents about the frequent microaggressions visited upon her by her schoolmates. By the time she arrived at her big state college, her social anxiety had intensified.


“One day I wore a shirt that said ‘I Love Back People.’ A White friend walked up and said it should say that I like all people. I got called the N-word and Black b*tch on campus. It was slap-you-in-the-face racism,” she says. As a pre-med student with a high grade-point average, Aye’s guidance counselor told her she would never be a doctor. Her confidence dropped, and she switched to nursing. She eventually graduated with a psychology major and business minor.

The tension grew to a point where Aye was terrified to go on campus. She finally went to a therapist but says she didn’t get anything from the session.

“I had a deep shame about it. I thought I was just depressed. Everybody at school was going through things,” she says. “You’re away from your parents for the first time and trying to figure out who you are. It’s a lot to handle.”

Aye started thrifting as an emotional outlet to deal with her growing isolation. She curated vintage outfits on Tumblr and quickly developed a following of enthusiastic buyers. By the time she graduated, the thrifting had evolved into a line of anime and Black affirmation T-shirts.

“I didn’t have much luck finding a job. So I drove to Dallas to stay with a friend. I was sad. I thought God hated me. I started Adorned by Chi for a creative outlet,” she explains. “Chi means God in Igbo. It was my way to give honor to God. I’ve always liked a feminine, magical aesthetic, but I never saw Black women represented. It was always fair-skinned images. I wanted to make something where Black women could be beautiful, feminine, and magical.”

So she started making flower crowns and tees that reflected this. Aye taught herself Adobe Illustrator and made a shirt that said “I’m Black and Proud” in pink Barbie print. She also made a shirt that said “Usagi Taught Me,” referencing the Sailor Moon anime character. The shirts immediately sold out.


Aye formed a now-defunct Facebook group of anime-loving Black nerds who loved girly looks and Black empowerment. She had been taking popular anime characters and making them look Black, but she grew tired of inserting Black images into anime. She wanted her own characters infused with African culture and informed by reality.

Now, Adorned by Chi is enriching and informing the anime world’s embrace of nonstereotypical and positive brown-skinned characters. Yet of all the accomplishments, Aye most relishes seeing Black girls cosplaying her creations.

“It makes me happy that little girls can see themselves,” she says. “I love seeing everyone, regardless of gender or size, in my stuff. I want worldwide domination.”
 
Has anybody said it wasn't?

Art is for everyone. That being said, i like those kinds of manga, and might check this out. Never knew it existed

View attachment 1787620
View attachment 1787619ok I'll admit the art isn't too bad and the character designs are kinda cute but it looks like a generic magic girl series. Anyways good for her.
Yeah the funny part was the combative nature of the title and article. If it were just a profile about her putting out her comic it would have been passed by. Good for her tho.
 
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I need remember those sperging shit in Tumblr back when TLOK was a thing in 2011/2014 when Black tumblrinas raged about Korra for being too "brown" and not "black".

Of course a anime black character have anxiety, holy shit; this is hilarious, what the fuck is wrong with those people? You can't wrote anything than 5 paragraphs per day?
 
I need remember those sperging shit in Tumblr back when TLOK was a thing in 2011/2014 when Black tumblrinas raged about Korra for being too "brown" and not "black".
I suppose they were new to the franchise and didn't realize her people were based off Inuits.

...and they should have been happy that "their representation" wasn't Korra. Like, the hell you getting mad for? Some angry, moody bicycle doesn't have your race?
 
The dieversity push for animu has been running full tilt for a few years now since Netfux and Sony got really political, with all the cringe Zogging you'd expect.
WUZ TRY'N 2 BE ANIME N SHIT.jpg
 
How hard is it to be a part of an anime community? Just sign up for an anime forum, pick your anime avatar, and argue over which anime character would look better on a full sized fuck pillow. It's so easy that I do it constantly... err, I mean, I could easily do it if I wanted to.
 
Japan is and, hopefully, will always be majority white. Therefore, almost all the characters are white. Hell, when the setting is suppose to be in a more "american" styled version, you will see black people a bit more frequently. I dont know how they think that black people dont appear, and hell, even be the main characters of anime and mangas...oh wait

these a pricks that dont watch and read those and simply want it to bend the knee to them. Well, my little soys, the western guilt filled white man may bend the knee but the average japanese man will kindly tell you to shove your pronuns where the sun doesnt shine before respectfully bowing down afterwards in a "cultural mic-drop". Ya cant bully them into submission, they arent bitch made.

So hopefully Manga and Anime are safe
 

Im wrong if you want to get technical, but dont act like the left doesnt consider asians to be "white" too. There are no black asians to appeal to and asians have a meritocracy and conservative culture, you know, stuff the left despises.

So for all intends and purposes, the japanese are "white"
 
Im wrong if you want to get technical, but dont act like the left doesnt consider asians to be "white" too. There are no black asians to appeal to and asians have a meritocracy and conservative culture, you know, stuff the left despises.

So for all intends and purposes, the japanese are "white"
White and Asian cultures are still substantially different. Even conservatism in Asia is wildly different from conservatism in the West.
 
It's almost like there's a difference between White culture and Black culture and a difference within them between Masculinity and Femininity :thinking:
Like a predisposition for insecurity further exacerbated by having two intimate cultural awarenesses?

Taking this at a bit of a slant: while I'm not swimming in enough mixed people to do a survey, without fail, in my experience, it's the guys that don't make any deal out of it and the girls have a complex over it or feel the need to bring it up-- doesn't even matter what kind of personality they have, too. You're not seeing a mixed guy half hate half of himself half the time. It's almost like nobody cares (at least, in the Year of our Lord Current Year + 5).

I watched one Afro-Japanese (or Afro-Latina-Japanese, or maybe Filipina-Japanese) lady introduce herself to a company rep back in college as she felt the need to mention that she was only half-Japanese, and she wasn't even any kind of show-off.

Knew a mixed (black/white) girl in my freshman year, but we didn't have any classes together after my first semester so we only occasionally saw each other around-- but when I saw her in my second year, I could have sworn that she was multiple shades lighter, like she was bleaching her skin or piling on makeup. It was uncanny.

Knew a guy in some ambiguous relationship with a girl (black/white, again) who subtitled herself a "hyperactive black-white [some medical profession, I can't recall]" in some messaging app he used, and apparently she occasionally talked about how he was her favorite [his ethnicity here] while talking about how she was some percentage of his ethnicity according to a 23andMe.

Was trying to woo a girl (black/white, again) in my freshman year.

...she didn't get any of my jokes-- what am I trying to get at, here?

In my admittedly limited experience, it seems like girls are more wont to be aware of their heritage/parentage and feel more insecure as a result if it distinguishes them. Or they try to cast themselves as "exotic" for some reason. Guys are slightly more all over mixed women of most kinds if they're not ugly, so I think that also eggs them on.
 
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