Changes

495 bytes added ,  00:17, 6 March 2013
no edit summary
Line 11: Line 11:     
''Shunga'' images also sometimes appeared within otherwise innocent guides to fashion, makeup, and hairstyling.
 
''Shunga'' images also sometimes appeared within otherwise innocent guides to fashion, makeup, and hairstyling.
 +
 +
They were also referred to as ''warai-e'', or "laughing pictures," not because they were meant to be humorous, but with the meaning that they were set apart from the normal realm; they belonged to a cultural or conceptual space outside of the mundane realm of real-life propriety and duty.<ref>Jacqueline Berndt, “Manga and ‘Manga’: Contemporary Japanese Comics and their Dis/similarities with Hokusai Manga,” in ''Manggha'', Krakow: Japanese Art and Technology Center (2008), 7.</ref>
    
==History==
 
==History==
contributor
27,126

edits