My yuri collection grows once again
Aug. 21st, 2025 06:24 pmguess who just got their copies of Secret Love and Hanamonogatari =u=
Secret Love was actually published a couple of months before what is generally considered the "first yuri manga", Shiroi Heya no Futari (well, first if you discount Sakura Namiki). It hasn't been scanned yet and digital copies aren't sold anywhere so I got a friend to send me her physical copy. (so kind T~T)
Hanamonogatari is of course the quintessential class-s collection, you've gotta read it if you have any interest in this sort of stuff.
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Date: 2025-09-14 06:02 pm (UTC)Ough, yea. Someone I know has some (less ancient, but still out of print) books that are also printed like that, and it makes me feel anxious about how out of print books could seriously use digitizing but these would require literally taking apart the book to do so....
Any idea why it's not being reprinted or published digitally?
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Date: 2025-09-22 04:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-10-01 09:06 pm (UTC)(I'd be a hypocrite if I judged, lmao)
Ugh. I fucking hate Copyright Limbo type situations. I feel like if a work ends up in that kind of situation where it's totally uncertain who it belongs to anymore... it should... default to public domain? As a matter of public good? That way it doesn't matter who the rights currently belong to, whoever has the material in that particular moment could re-publish. As it stands, nobody's even profiting on a work once it's in that situation, so even copyright's dirty capitalistic purpose as monopoly-maintaining has been "failed" - much less any of the more lofty "protecting artists' rights" goals that it dresses itself up in and that people fall for.