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  1. #1
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    Cosplay

    I went to a screener last night and there were some cosplayers. And then the article below came up and I didn't know where to put it. We've done some cosplay-ish threads - Fist of Furry (which focuses on a fraction of the fetish), Sword hotties (my personal fav, which focuses on another fraction), Real Life 'Superheroes' (which is about what it says it's about), and the continual stream of disregard for LARPers. We even ran an ezine article on it: The Care and Feeding of Your Inner Superhero by Lori Ann White. But there's no thread dedicated to the overall phenomena, so I'm launching this one.

    Here's that article:
    Japanese Schoolgirls Bring Manga Style Martial Arts To Life for Fun

    What looks like a Japanese manga come to life is really a bunch of schoolgirls having fun with friends. Or is it? Dun dun dun.






    These photos recently appeared on 2ch, Japan's largest bulletin board, under the heading, "Schoolgirls Nowadays lol".

    While some 2ch users humorously pointed out that this was the martial art technique known as the "hakkei" (発勁) in Japanese. (In Chinese martial arts, "hakkei" is known as "fajin".)

    Others 2ch users uploaded photos that had been altered, giving the images a decidedly manga feel. "Schoolgirls now are manipulating chi?" asked one 2ch user. "Schoolgirls these days sure are scary," added another, while yet another summed it up, "They're masters of air."

    Expand

    This seems like a thing, at least, with a handful of students. But it's not a national craze. Yet.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  2. #2
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    If I walked on to the subway and saw this...

    ...I would lose it completely.

    This is scarier than any horror film.

    Cosplayers invade the Kyoto subway system to promote upcoming event!
    Paula Gerhold 22 hours ago



    The Kyoto subway was swarmed by mobs of cosplayers last weekend, alarming some commuters and intriguing others. Though Japan may be thought of as the “land of cosplay,” it’s actually extremely rare to see this many layers (shortening of “cosplayers”) out and about in public. Cosplay is all well and good at certain events, but a major no-no in areas where it can cause trouble for the uninitiated.

    So what were all these guys (yes, mainly guys) doing on the subway? Why, promoting the upcoming Kyoto Manga Anime Festival and it’s connected cosplay event, GO-TAN! of course!


    GO-TAN! is an active cosplay group that organizes events in and around Kyoto. This time, they’ve got quite an area staked out for the use of fans that wish to don the garb of their favorite characters and take some snazzy outdoor pictures! The cosplay space will span from Uzumasa Tenjigawa to Rokujizou, but be careful that you don’t stray out of the specified area while still in costume (It’s against the event rules and might get the organizers in trouble with the locals).


    Online sign-ups for this cosplay photo shoot started on August 25. The main event is September 7 and 8 at Heian Jingu-mae Okazaki Park. It’s only 1,000 yen (about US$10) to participate as either a cosplayer or a cameraman, so those of you in the Kansai area looking to bust out your ninja headbands and keyblades should check it out!
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  3. #3
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    well...you've gone done it now.

    i cant tell if this is a sword hottie or a wonder woman cosplay...

    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  4. #4
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    I really want to call 'foul' on this one, Lucas

    Unfortunately, the SH game rules don't quite apply to this cosplay thread...yet. Nevertheless, there is already a lot of cosplay there, and even a wonder woman tribute.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  5. #5
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    Are you telling me that that picture is posted in the SH thread already?!?!?!

    omfg ok hold on let me find a non sword picture to contribute....let me just think of something nice and weird.
    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  6. #6
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    You guys watch Heros if Cosplay on Syfy channel? I would bang that red-headed Asperger's chick who pees in cups.
    He most honors my style who learns under it to destroy the teacher. -- Walt Whitman

    Quote Originally Posted by David Jamieson View Post
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  7. #7
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    lol never heard of it until now...but i have this urge to find out who you are talking about.
    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  8. #8
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    maybe this will work better for you Gene. No swords. In fact I think swords should not be allowed in this thread because there is a likelyhood that any sword+girl picture on the internet has already been posted in the sword hottie thread.

    is this guy doing it right?

    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  9. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by MasterKiller View Post
    You guys watch Heros if Cosplay on Syfy channel? I would bang that red-headed Asperger's chick who pees in cups.
    R1ddle, (YaYa's friend on the show in Atlanta,) ran an anime club that I went to in Canada back in the 90s. We were heated rivals on the message boards for the longest time. (I usually got flamed by the fanboys who wanted to bone her.) We've made peace since then and still chat from time to time.
    Last edited by BigChris; 09-17-2014 at 11:50 PM.

  10. #10
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    Oivay...

    Name:  ogan8ioxybqojz1pc220.jpg
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Size:  97.4 KB
    Psalms 144:1
    Praise be my Lord my Rock,
    He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !

  11. #11
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    shes definitely hot. blasted her all over this thread a while back:

    Steampunk
    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  12. #12
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    Heroes of Cosplay....ROFLMAO!

    And I thought Naked and Afraid was a silly reality show concept.


    Now that I think about it, HoC and N&A are polar opposites.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
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  13. #13
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    This one is for Gene.

    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  14. #14
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    just for the pure awesomeness of this guys costume.

    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  15. #15
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    Cosplay in China

    What cosplay is like in China, where home-grown heroes thrive, ‘play’ is emphasised and it’s not all about copying
    China’s cosplay market is uniquely open to interpretation due to its isolation behind the Great Firewall
    The practice itself has a profound effect on the identities of ‘cosers’, as they combine their own sense of self with the personalities and values of fictional characters
    Timothy Parent
    Published: 12:30pm, 26 Oct, 2019


    Chinese cosers dress as characters from the game Wangzhe Rongyao at an event in China. The subculture of cosplay is hugely popular in China.

    Cosplay is a portmanteau of costume and play, and the first recorded instances of cosplay were in 1908 in Cincinnati, Ohio, the US, and in 1910 in Tacoma, Washington.
    Two fans of Mr Skygack, the world’s first sci-fi comic, both dressed up as the strip’s protagonist, an alien anthropologist, to attend “masked parties”. But unlike Halloween, a costume for a “coser” is not relegated to one day per year and then disposed of.
    However accepted and even celebrated a coser’s efforts may be on Halloween, the practice has never really been considered fashion, as it simply replicates designs, details and demeanours from fictional and historical figures.
    But surprisingly, cosplay and fashion do share a number of similarities: they are both second skins, they are both kinds of performance art, and in China they both developed around the same time.


    A Chinese coser dressed as the character Gao Jian Li from game Wangzhe Rongyao.

    The world of cosplay, in China in particular, stems primarily from ACG, which stands for anime, comic and games. One game alone, League of Legends, was compelling enough for Louis Vuitton to partner with game developer Riot Games to design a trophy travel case, unique champion skins, “digital assets”, and even a capsule collection.

    Spin-offs from League of Legends such as Wangzhe Rongyao and Arena of Valor, alongside a slew of Chinese and foreign games alike, have created a rich archive of characters for cosers to emulate, but anime and comics are what first started cosplay in China.


    Louis Vuitton partnered with Riot Games for the League of Legends 2019 World Championship.

    According to netizen Banana Sonna, pirated offprints of popular Japanese animations such as Astro Boy became available in China as early as the late 1980s. These were made accessible by the Hainan Photography and Fine Arts Publishing House, but a majority of Japanese source material did not make its way to China until the ’90s.
    The term ACG itself wasn’t even born until 1995, but personal homepages were already being offered by NetEase in 1997. By 2000, peer-to-peer software allowed cosers to more readily connect, and BitTorrent in 2003 gave them access to much broader source materials.
    Soon events, conventions, stores, malls and associations specifically made for cosers began to pop up around the country, but the real boost to the movement came from Taobao, which lowered the barrier to entry for first-timers with cheap and accessible costumes. (Taobao is a unit of the Alibaba Group, which owns the Post.)
    For example, Amy Xiaotian Zhang opted to buy her Mulan outfit from Taobao to attend New York Comic Con instead of making her own, despite her formal training as a fashion designer. However, she is considering creating her own costume for next year, as she has had trouble finding costumes for Mulan as a warrior.


    Amy Xiaotian Zhang opted to buy her Mulan outfit from Taobao to attend New York Comic Con.

    But despite the general popularity of Disney, Marvel and Japanese characters in China, the protectionist tendencies of the country have provided a market for home-grown characters to thrive.
    Zhang started to see many more Chinese comics around 2010 when she first went to college, and now many conventions like the 22nd Firefly ACG Expo in Guangzhou focus primarily on Chinese IP and talent. Chinese characters used to be few and far between, but now there are many heroes that claim a Chinese origin.
    Having characters that look Chinese matters, especially when the cosplay industry is obsessed with exactly replicating fictional characters, but the irony of cosplay in China is that it is less about copying and more about interpretation. According to Wang Kanzhi’s research for a master’s programme in East Asian Studies at Lund University in Sweden, cosplay in China is more open to interpretation because the “Great Firewall” has isolated the community from not only other cosers but also original source materials.
    “Due to the different understanding of the original pieces, local cosplayers tend to add their own ideas and points of view into the activity, which obviously changes the original characters,” Wang says. “In other words, the local cosplayers do not only duplicate fictional characters, but add their own creative points to the original form and content.”


    In China, cosplay is typically a group activity.

    What Wang also notes about China’s unique cosplay scene is that the activity is typically for groups, not solo players; additionally, the play aspect is emphasised in China, so re-enacting or creating original dramas, plays, stage performances and video clips is central to the Chinese cosplay experience.
    There is an overlap between acting and cosplay everywhere, as actress and graduate student Heather Gilbert notes. She went to New York Comic Con as a gender-bended Dr McCoy with Spock from Star Trek. Gilbert notes that as an actress she is “already a show-off”, and the performative nature of cosplay certainly appealed to her as a real-life way to escape and express some sort of alter ego.


    Heather Gilbert went to New York Comic Con as a gender-bended Dr McCoy.

    But why are so many young Chinese people drawn to fantasy and escapism? Writer Charlotte Miller and artist Cao Fei explain this in The Gamification of Everyday Life.
    “Playing out their innermost fantasies of having certain magical powers – be it the ability to fly or being a skilled ninja – these youth turn to the world of the virtual, the world of play, because that is the world in which they find comfort, understanding and empowerment,” the book explains.
    “The characters played often are violent or power-hungry, reflecting the fact that in real life, these youth are powerless. The world of the game, or gamescape, becomes a space in which the youth can exert control over their own destiny, their own lives. In this gamescape, the youth feel like they have worth in society, a feeling that they do not have in the real world.”


    A Chinese coser as a character from the game Wangzhe Rongyao.

    The referenced “gamescape” is also known to Chinese cosers as the “second dimension”. Writer and strategist Tanner Greer explains that it extends far beyond ACG and is neither genre nor product, but rather “a world one lives in, visits and joins. It is both a culture and, in the minds of its inhabitants, a place.”
    This cultural and spatial shift brings with it a raft of social and economic implications, as well as opportunities. But by simply dressing up and emulating characters and personas, cosers in China have created an entirely new dimension, culture, economy and lifestyle for the 21st century.
    Cosplay is less about escaping by dressing up and more about embodying values through symbolism. For example, Jacob Rudolph, a 22-year-old student-athlete in Kansas, the US, has always felt a connection to Captain America because he always did what was right. Rudolph has invested quite a bit of money to look like Captain America, but the real benefit for him is being able to demonstrate, through the symbolic nature of his clothes, the values that he and Captain America share.


    Jacob Rudolph as Captain America.

    And this emulation of fictional characters is having a profound effect on many young people around the world. As they are still forming their identities, cosplay allows them to literally become their role models, values and all, regardless of the “realness” of these characters.
    As Christoph Noe explains in Young Chinese Artists: “It is in this gap between the realistic cityscapes and the fantastic havens these young people find their heroic alter egos.”

    This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: How world of cosplay took on a chinese accent
    Well, this article seems to have more from NYCC than PRCCC but it's interesting nevertheless. I feel that author misses a major factor of cosplay - the cameraderie of fandom. But I didn't realize cosplay was as much a thing in China. It makes sense - cosplay is massive in Japan so some would surely cross over.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

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