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Retrieved February 9, 2022. ^ アニメーション・アルバム・オブ・ザ・イヤー | 第36回日本ゴールドディスク大賞|THE GOLD DISC (in Japanese). Japan Gold Disc Award. Archived from the original on March 13, 2022. Retrieved March 18, 2022. ^ "40th JASRAC Awards".[90][91] Outside of Japan[edit] The first company to release lesbian-themed manga in North America was Yuricon's publishing arm ALC Publishing. [92] Their works include Rica Takashima's Rica 'tte Kanji!? (1995–1996) and their annual yuri manga anthology Yuri Monogatari, both of which were published in 2003. [92] The latter collects stories by American, European, and Japanese creators, including Akiko Morishima, Althea Keaton, Kristina Kolhi, Tomomi Nakasora, and Eriko Tadeno. [93][94] These works range from fantasy stories to more realistic tales dealing with themes such as coming out and sexual orientation. [94] Besides ALC Publishing, the Los Angeles-based Seven Seas Entertainment has also incurred in the genre, with the English version of well known titles such as Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl (2004–2007) and Strawberry Panic! (2003–2007). [9] On October 24, 2006, Seven Seas announced the launch of their specialized yuri manga line, which includes titles such as Strawberry Panic!, The Last Uniform (2004–2006),[9] and Comic Yuri Hime's compilations such as Voiceful (2004–2006) and First Love Sisters (2003–2008). [53] Between 2011 and 2013, the now-defunct JManga released several yuri titles to its digital subscription platform, before terminating service on March 13, 2013. [95] As of 2017, Viz Media and Yen Press began publishing yuri manga,[96][97] with Tokyopop following in 2018. [98] Kodansha Comics announced its debut into publishing both yuri and yaoi manga in 2019, as well as Digital Manga launching a new imprint specializing in yuri dōjin manga. [99][100] As yuri gained further recognition outside Japan, some artists began creating original English-language manga that were labeled as yuri or having yuri elements and subplots. Early examples of original English-language yuri comics include Steady Beat (2003) by Rivkah LaFille and 12 Days (2006) by June Kim, which were published between 2005 and 2006.
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