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[70] Tachi and neko[edit] In Japanese lesbian culture, the participants in a lesbian relationship are occasionally referred to as tachi (タチ, lit. "top", as derived from tachiyaku, the male role in kabuki), which designates the active participant, and neko (ネコ, lit. "cat"), which designates the
submissive participant. [71] This distinction is comparable to that of the seme and uke distinction in yaoi, or to the butch and femme distinction in broader lesbian culture. [72] Characters in contemporary yuri rarely conform to these dichotomies,[30] though the dynamic of an active partner and a passive partner that the tachi and neko distinction represents does recur in the genre. [72] Media[edit] Main article: List of yuri works In Japan[edit] In the mid-1990s and early 2000s, some Japanese lesbian lifestyle magazines contained manga sections, including the now-defunct magazines Anise (1996–97, 2001–03) and Phryné (1995). [49] Carmilla, an erotic lesbian publication,[49] released an anthology of lesbian manga called Girl's Only. [73] Additionally, Mist (1996–99), a ladies' comic manga magazine, contained sexually explicit lesbian-themed manga as part of a section dedicated to lesbian-interest topics. [49] The first publication marketed exclusively as yuri was Sun Magazine's manga anthology magazine Yuri Shimai, which was released between June
2003 and November 2004 in quarterly installments, ending with only five issues. [74] After the magazine's discontinuation, Comic Yuri Hime was launched by Ichijinsha in July 2005 as a revival of the magazine,[75] containing manga by many of the authors who had had work serialized in Yuri Shimai. [76] Like its predecessor, Comic Yuri Hime was also published quarterly but went on to release bi-monthly on odd months from January 2011 to December 2016, after which it became monthly.