🐱 Dirty Pair's Excellent Trans Representation (And What Modern Anime Can Learn From It)

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Representation in anime is always a hot-button topic. While it has undoubtedly gotten better in the last 20 years, there remains room for improvement. This is especially true for transgender representation, as it is still rare to find trans characters in anime. And even when it happens, there is a good chance they'll be built around an offensive and outdated stereotype. However, one episode of the cult-classic anime Dirty Pair featured fantastic transgender representation, despite hitting screens way back in 1985.

The Dirty Pair franchise started as a series of light novels written by Haruka Takachiho and illustrated by Yoshikazu Yasuhiko before being adapted into an anime by Sunrise in 1985. The story is set in 2138, with humanity having spread out and colonized space -- which can lead to the colonists running into surprising problems. Thankfully, the World Welfare Works Association helps those in need by sending Trouble Consultants to solve their client's issues. Dirty Pair follows Kei and Yuri, two Trouble Consultants nicknamed the Dirty Pair due to their habit of leaving a trail of destruction in their wake.

Episode 7 of Dirty Pair, titled "Love Is Everything, Betting Their Lives on Elopement," sees the Dirty Pair hired by the billionaire Moon de Goldjeff. He tells the duo that his son Clicky has been kidnapped by a woman named Lilis Joanca and wants the Dirty Pair to rescue him. However, it turns out Goldjeff is lying -- Clicky wasn't kidnapped. He's actually in love with Joanca, but Goldjeff can't accept their relationship because Joanca is a transgender woman.

The viewing audience gets to see a lot of Joanca, who is a wonderfully realized character with a lot of depth. And unlike many series with a transgender character, she is never the butt of the joke, nor is she played for laughs. She is treated like any other character in the show and is given emotional moments and character development. In fact, one of the highlights of this episode is how Joanca and Clicky's relationship is handled.

The two are shown to have a loving relationship, and Clicky knows about and fully accepts Joanca. One of the cutest moments in the episode is when the couple decides to go and buy burgers, only to start singing the restaurant's jingle together as they drive. This stands out as it's so rare to see transgender characters enjoying themselves and their relationships, as they're often used for tragic storylines or mean-spirited humor.

However, one of the standout moments is when Goldjeff confronts Clicky and Joanca personally. He says he can't accept Joanca as "she used to be a man." Clicky responds by saying that she's a woman now and he doesn't care about the past. Goldjeff agrees, but notes he still won't accept her. However, despite being the villain, Goldjeff never misgenders Joanca or resorts to slurs, which is extremely rare. On top of this, the Dirty Pair respond to the revelation by chastising Goldjeff for being "closed-minded" before pointing out that, in the world of Dirty Pair, "one in ten people have gotten their sex changed," suggesting that transgender people are much more accepted in the future.

This is topped off by the fact that Joanca survives the episode's events. The final scene sees Clicky chasing after Joanca in a rocket ship so the pair can be together, marking a rare example of a transgender character getting an implied happy ending rather than being killed off for the sake of tragedy and drama.

"Love Is Everything, Betting Their Lives on Elopement" is an example of an anime handling transgender representation with tact and decency. Joanca is an amazingly realized character as Dirty Pair tackles the transgender experience without falling back on offensive stereotypes. It's stunning to realize an episode from 1985 outclasses most modern anime. However, it also presents an excellent model for other shows to follow and build on, proving you can create a character who sensitively represents the transgender community while also being a fantastic addition to the cast in their own right.
 
The far future in space and trannies are still broad shouldered giants.
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They've resulted to digging into 35 year old animu to find muh tranny representation. Another springboard to "This is why so and so is trans". This is just a rare example of the character actually being a troon..

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The future they crave. Imagine the horror.
 
Trannies still mad medical science hasn't been able to create a perfect vagina in the year of our Lord 2022.

Dirty Pair takes place in the mid-22nd century. We still have a long ways to go as-is in the 21st century. Maybe science will have drastically improved in the next 115 years to allow sex changes flawlessly, but it's nothing more than a pipe dream, and it's also science fiction. Cope, seethe, dilate, and get the fuck out of my weeb circles.
 
We're only about a decade out from journofags writing articles praising the message and representation in Boku no Pico.

No joke, Ana Valens, the extremely degenerate tranny who used to write for the Daily Dot, once wrote this about the old hentai visual novel X-Change:
One of my favorite adult games as a teen was a little-known visual novel called X-Change. Originally released in Japan, the game focuses on a high school student named Takuya Aihara who transforms into a woman after being exposed to strange chemicals. As it turns out, this makes her incredibly attractive to her classmates, letting her have plenty of fun in her new body along the way.

X-Change appealed to me for the same reason so much “gender transformation” porn did: It gave me a safe sexual outlet to explore my gender identity. Here was a game that let me play as a high school boy-turned-woman, engaging with other students as an active participant, not just a passive viewer. It taught me that porn can help people understand their needs and desires, especially people who may not be able to find their stories in mainstream media. If I couldn’t live as a girl, at least I could pleasure myself as one.
What's left unstated here is that the majority of the content in the X-Change series is the genderbendered main character getting raped in a variety of encounters. There's even a running gag of the character accidentally getting on the same infamous "rape bus."
 
The best trans representation I've seen is Hana from Tokyo Godfathers, but despite Hana being a well-fleshed out character with understandable motivations, "she" isn't depicted as hot and fuckable, so therefore no one wants to talk about it.
 
A character who was less relevant than Gren (Cowboy Bebop) is peak representation. Only gonna be a matter of time till putting your brain in a cyborg body (Ghost in the Shell) is a 100% trans allegory because it lets you be your authentic self or whatever.
 
putting your brain in a cyborg body (Ghost in the Shell) is a 100% trans allegory because it lets you be your authentic self or whatever.
Honestly surprises me that cyberpunk media doesn't get brought up more by troons. Genderbending surgery (but actually successful), robot bodies and cyberspace avatars seem like a shoe in for trans talking points.

It's always comics, anime, porn or anime porn that gets brought up though.
 
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Honestly surprises me that cyberpunk media doesn't get brought up more by troons. Genderbending surgery (but actually successful), robot bodies and cyberspace avatars seem like a shoe in for trans talking points.

It's always comics, anime, porn or anime porn that gets brought up though.
Part of it is these people have no real life experience. They'll tell you how accepting anime (and thus Japan) is about LGBT/Trannies; without realizing they're practically a side-show freak and get treated as such. Other progressives make claims about it to in regard to their own pet issues; without realizing that Japanese are polite, but can and will socially isolate you out in the most spectacular display of group passive-aggressiveness... while the older one will tell you right to your face they don't like niggers, fatties, gaijin, etc. Not to get too far into that, but the lack of life experience, and actually interacting with other people and cultures and shit, especially ones that challenge you, they become mentally isolated. If they don't like what someone online is saying, they can block them (or the mods will); and with how hard this shit is being pushed at all levels of society, I dare say it's becoming normalized, so it's reinforced that they're not wrong, you're wrong, and you're also a bigot.
 
The best trans representation I've seen is Hana from Tokyo Godfathers, but despite Hana being a well-fleshed out character with understandable motivations, "she" isn't depicted as hot and fuckable, so therefore no one wants to talk about it.
Hana also understands who she is and doesn't demand people validate her existence or whatever. She's who troons should be, but their narcissism and thinly-veiled fetish prevents them from being good people and treating everyone else with nothing but kindness.
 
We're only about a decade out from journofags writing articles praising the message and representation in Boku no Pico.
I give it a year, year and a half tops. Have you seen the current state of journalism?
 
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