Love Hina Mangaka Warns Of Rising Pressure From Foreign Markets To “Introduce Political Correctness Into Manga”

Mangaka Ken Akamatsu, perhaps best known as the mangaka behind the extremely popular Love Hina series, recently shared his concerns regarding the rising pressure from Western markets to “introduce political correctness” into manga and the possible negative effects such a push could have for creators and fans across the medium.


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Love Hina Mangaka Warns Of Rising Pressure From Foreign Markets To “Introduce Political Correctness Into Manga”​

Spencer Baculi

June 4, 2021

Anime, Manga

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Mangaka Ken Akamatsu, perhaps best known as the mangaka behind the extremely popular Love Hina series, recently shared his concerns regarding the rising pressure from Western markets to “introduce political correctness” into manga and the possible negative effects such a push could have for creators and fans across the medium.

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Source: Love Hina Vol. 5 (2002, Kodansha. Art by Ken Akamatsu.
A vocal and outspoken anti-censorship critic in his own right, Akamatsu broached the subject of ‘political correctness’ during the opening panel of the recent Manga Artist Mirari Conference, an online event held last December wherein various manga creators were invited to discuss their thoughts on the current state of the industry and their outlooks on the future.

According to a machine translation of Logmi’s transcript of the panel, when asked for his thoughts on “manga and the overseas market,” Akamatsu laughed and responded, “In short, it’s politically correct.”

“Political correctness. External pressure is coming, such as [the pressure to] ‘introduce political correctness into manga and movies,’” the mangaka added. “That’s dangerous, isn’t it?”

Akamatsu then explained, “So far, when Japanese manga is at the stage of looking at the world, there is a pressure on the scene to meet more global standards.”

“I’d like to have the manga artists unify their opinions to some extent as to whether such things are ‘correct or not,’” he continued. “However, when the sales of works that have become globalized and have no sharp edges are good, they end up saying, ‘Oh, [political correctness] might be good.’”

The veteran mangaka’s sentiments were echoed by co-panelist Takuma Kobayashi, the Representative Director of publishing house Number Nine Co. Ltd., who similarly opined, “Regardless of the company, I think that ‘freedom of expression’ should be respected in my personal opinion.”

Akamatsu later remarked, “if you don’t go abroad, [the political correctness] problem isn’t a battle at all,” which prompted Kobayashi to share his “personal idea” that “I don’t think [a series] will sell that much when it comes to selling [itself as politically correct].”

“The point is, ‘Manga that was released without being conscious of political correctness cannot be read due to the political correctness problem,’” said Kobayashi. “I think this is a mess. Like [a fire].”

Recalling how he had “heard that the excitement of Hollywood movies is generally decided by script doctors and scenario doctors,” Akamatsu joked, “from now on, I’d like to release various blacks and whites with political correctness in mind.”

“It may be the same no matter what you look at, like ‘Avengers,’” conceded Akamatsu. “I don’t know, but after all it’s a hit.”


In turning to the debate of ‘mass appeal’ vs ‘artistic authenticity’, Akamatsu observed, “The one that hits may go to Hollywood, [but], it is better to have freedom of expression.”

“Manga is mainly about freedom of expression, and it feels like you don’t give in to political correctness,” noted Akamatsu, before questioning, “Is it a loss if the politically correct works get overwhelming power? I wonder if that means.”

However, Kobayashi reassured Akamatsu “even if there is entertainment that goes against political correctness, it would be different if this (current idea of political correctness) remains the same 10 years later, 20 years later, 30 years later, and so on.”

“It wasn’t even five years ago. I was told recently,” Kobayashi said. “The possibility that this will become the standard for the future is not zero, but it may change again.”

He concluded, “That’s why I think it’s important not to win or lose in the short term, but to always create something that you can be proud of as entertainment.”

What do you make of Akamatsu and Kobayashi’s thoughts on political correctness in the manga industry? Let us know your thoughts on social media or in the comments down below!


 
I doubt this will be a problem even if all manga and anime is given a censored localization. Weebs eventually end up just watching/reading the original unaltered versions anyway.
 
I think people bring this up because they feel there was a time where there weren't the hipsters talking about how Miyazaki and Cowboy Bebop are groundbreaking or the people who frequent ANN or Twitter talking about how things are problematic by Western standards. And then you have the people complaining about how places like Funimation alter things to fit their Western liberal worldview...and are proud of it.
The amount of bitchy libruls (I refuse to call them liberals, they're spiteful assholes who thinks their libshit goodthink cancels out their innate asshole) who unironically advocates for Americans to go and "show the Japs how its done" is shocking.

Even better when I get blank stares for pointing out that they're advocating modern cultural imperialism, and the inevitable excuse that "its okay when we do it because muh right side of history". Well, the English thought they were on the right side of history when they were killing brownskins and slanty-eyes back then. Funny how history repeats.

What kind of societal self-hatred leads to wokeism that Japan lacks?
I feel like the West has been slowly atomizing to the point where the average individuals do not feel a connection to either their heritage or to their nation. For all the faults of Japanese and Chinese culture, there's still a very strong sense of kinship with each other.
 
Another sign it's not going woke yet: there's this new Power Rangers-ish thing coming out. Notice how there's no forced diversity in the poster? How many are guys? Can you imagine if something like that was released in the West with an all-white cast? It'd be "cancelled" faster than you can say "triggered"...
That's a dumb way to measure it, Japanese live action couldn't become diverse even if it wanted to.
 
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Shimoneta speaks to this, albeit with a comedic twist. Funnily enough it aired in 2015.
It's like people just woke up one day and decided everything has to be the polar opposite of the past, whatever was the norm, that was the wrong way of doing things, the correct way is to do the exact polar opposite!

That's one of the keys to understand how Woke works, whatever was the norm, it's got to be the opposite now, no matter how logical the norm was and illogical doing the opposite is, people absolutely fucking demand it, at this rate in the future people will be walking backwards and wearing their pants on their heads just because it's different than the norm.

They're trying to undo literally thousands of years of human cultural history, it's terrifying, these people would put every last old book, movie, game, painting etc in a giant pile and burn it with a smile on their face Fahrenheit 451 style.

It's like they're not even real humans, they're anti-humans, most of them are disturbing to simply look at, there's something fucking wrong with those people.

The same could be said of other Asian countries especially China
Indeed, it can be said about Asia in general.

The west really does seem like it's dying, maybe it's the east's turn to run the world.

I miss those days. No mainstream identity politics, and no rash of "weeb shaming" of anyone showing even the slightest interest in anime (which was more mainstream in the West then). Also good internet memes.
It wasn't perfect, the equivalent of today's racial animosity back then was Religious division, people were incredibly fucking bitter and hateful about Religion back then in a way that anticipates the bitterness and hatefulness of people today.

The difference though is the whole Atheist vs Christian conflict didn't permeate literally every single aspect of life like today's racial conflict does and eventually people just got the fuck over the controversy and stopped arguing about it so much.

Another similarity is the 9/11 conspiracy theory movement, which they want people to forget was mostly a left wing thing back then, tied in with hatred of Dubya in general, just like today's Wokesters the 9/11 conspiracy theorists would viciously attack anyone that dared to question their narratives.

But all that stuff was so much more isolated back then compared to today, the negatives aspects of the 2000s then went on to encompass literally everything and it fucking sucks.

What kind of societal self-hatred leads to wokeism that Japan lacks?
Japan has never bent over backwards to apologize for their war crimes in WW2, they also value their cultural history and heritage, the Japanese simply... like Japan, meanwhile more and more citizens of the United States fucking despise their own country, heritage and culture, to the point that they tear statues down, burn flags etc.
 
So when he says pressure from foreign markets, exactly how? Because I'm betting it's not from the people who are actually buying the stuff but from non-customers who just tweet about it.
 
Unpopular opinion

I don't think manga should be censored, just those who watch is publicly shamed. Manga and anime is for wierdos, basement dwellers and pedo's. Sorry for the generalisation but it's really, really creepy and i've never met a consoooomer of manga/anime who didn't have the look and characteristics of the classic 90's 'I'm a disgusting pervert'. Fat, sweaty, unkempt and 90% of the time has fantasised about fucking cartoon 'kids'.

And let's started on anime avatars

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_bias
 
One recent example is Shield Hero. That has a false #MeToo accusation right out of the gate, some sexualization of child characters, and slavery.

There's been a few arguments put forth that the author of Shield Hero is secretly redpilled as fuck and wrote a lot of the relationships and interactions in the manga to directly spite SJW types. That's probably reaching quite a bit, but I can certainly see how some people hold that viewpoint.
 
There's been a few arguments put forth that the author of Shield Hero is secretly redpilled as fuck and wrote a lot of the relationships and interactions in the manga to directly spite SJW types. That's probably reaching quite a bit, but I can certainly see how some people hold that viewpoint.
I'm sure someone's making a list.

I want to know which plane of existence the mangaka of Virgin Extinction Island is on.

And who can forget Odoru! Kremlin Kyuuden
 
The day the japs give in to the gaijin SJWs is the day we should wrap up the human race and see if the cockroaches can build a better civilisation a billion years from now.

Maybe they never do so the SJW gaijin decide to persuade China to make the anime/manga according to their sensibilities/agenda/propaganda
 
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Maybe they never do so the SJW gaijin decide to persuade China to make the anime/manga according to their sensibilities/agenda/propaganda
Imo its more likely that the political correctness that the Japanese are worried about is actually coming from China and Korea more than America.

The American market is kind enough to censor for themselves, to a certain extent. like the recent shit with the Mushoku Tensei light novel getting scenes censored and cut by the translation editors.

China and Koreans are on another level entirely.
 
This is kind of odd to me because in my heyday, the 2000s, it seems like anime fans were more willing to try older series, of course maybe I'm remembering it wrong, but that's how I seem to remember it, on Adult Swim they would air even 70s animes like Lupin and the original Gundam.
There is a wide gulf between anime fans and casuals & normies cause Cartoon Network did show Lupin the 3rd, Dragon Ball and original Gundam up to 9/11/01 and used the attack to stopped showing them. Since the casuals and normies never were interested in watching them or anything else older than the late 90ies.
 
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There is a wide gulf between anime fans and casuals & normies cause Cartoon Network did show Lupin the 3rd, Dragon Ball and original Gundam up to 9/11/01 and used the attack to stopped showing them. Since the casuals and normies never were interested in watching them or anything else older than the late 90ies.
I recall CN airing the shit out of dragon ball and recently they aired the new Lupin seasons... I dunno about the gundams, though.
 
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