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09. Momoi Yui Sakamoto Reiji Shiratori Demons Amaimon Mephisto Pheles Kuro Demon Impure King Ukobach Byakko Exorcists Arthur A. Angel Mephisto Pheles Shura Kirigakure Tatsuma Suguro Nemu Takara Kaoru Tsubaki Exwires Illuminati Renzo Shima Saburota Todo Lucifer Michael Gedōin Maria Yoshida Homare Todo Gunnar Lundström Myōō Dharani Ryuji Suguro Konekomaru Miwa Yaozo Shima Tatsuma Suguro Kinzo Shima Myōō Dharani Torako Suguro Media Guide Manga Volumes and Chapters One Shot Salaryman Exorcist: The Sorrows of Yukio Okumura Anime Episodes OVA Omake DVDs Movie Blue Exorcist Movie Music Opening Themes Ending Themes Soundtracks Singles Books Guides Ao no Exorcist Color Archive - Animation & Comic Visual Guidebook Ao no Exorcist Color Bible Pocket Garo Color Collection Novels Ao no Exorcist Weekend Hero Ao no Exorcist Home Sweet Home Ao no Exorcist The Movie (Novel) Ao no Exorcist Bloody Fairytale Ao no Exorcist Spy Game Other Time Killers Games Blue Exorcist: The Chronocyclic Labyrinth Blue Exorcist: DAMNED CHORD Alternavelt -Blue Exorcist Gaiden- Plays LIVE ACT Ao no Exorcist Ao no Exorcist -Ao no Honoo Kakusei-hen Kyoto Guren-hen Stage Blue Exorcist Universe World Exorcists True Cross Order Demons Blue Night Locations True Cross Academy True Cross Order Facility The Old Male Dormitory Academy Forest District Vatican Main Office Southern Cross Boys' Monastery Kyoto Branch Office Community Recent Changes Random Page Images Administration Policies Manual of Style Layout Guide Blocking Policy Blog Policy Message Policy User Page Policy Spoiler Policy Naming Policy Chat Policy Animanga Hub in: Miscellaneous Blue Exorcist View source View history Talk (3) Blue Exorcist (青の祓魔師 (エクソシスト) Ao no Ekusoshisuto) is a manga written and illustrated by Kazue Katō. The manga has been serialized in the Jump SQ magazine by Shueisha since April 2009, with individual chapters collected into 26 tankōbon volumes as of December 4, 2020. A one-shot also written and illustrated by Kazue Katō, entitled The Miyama-Uguisu Mansion Incident (宮山鶯邸事件 Miyama Uguisu Tei Jiken), inspired the Blue Exorcist manga, and was first featured in the September 2008 issue of Jump SQ. The series was first adapted into an anime television series by A-1 Pictures that broadcasted from April to October in 2011. A film was subsequently produced by the same studio, entitled BLUE EXORCIST THE MOVIE, which premiered in December 2012. In January 2017, a second season of the anime was released, covering the Kyoto Impure King arc of the manga. Viz Media licensed the manga for North American production, with the first volume being released on April 5, 2011. The series then began a localized serialization in the publication Shonen Jump Alpha on July 30, 2012, starting with Chapter 33 of the manga. Contents 1 Plot 2 Manga 3 Anime 4 Reception Plot The world of Ao no Exorcist consists of two dimensions joined as one, like a mirror.[48] Another prominent author of this period is Kaho Nakayama, active since the early 1990s, with works involving love stories among women. [46] The first Japanese magazines specifically targeted towards lesbians, many of which contained sections featuring yuri manga, also emerged during this period. [49] Stories in these magazines ranged from high school romance to lesbian life and love and featured varying degrees of sexual content. [49][50] 2000s: Publishing and fan culture growth[edit] Faced with a proliferation of stories focused on homosociality, homoeroticism, and female homosexuality, some publishers sought to exploit the yuri market by creating manga magazines dedicated to the genre, coalescing around yuri as the preferred name for this genre in response to its popularity in dōjinshi culture. [6] In 2003, Yuri Tengoku and Yuri Shimai launched as the first manga magazines devoted exclusively to yuri. [51] This was followed by the female reader-oriented Comic Yuri Hime in 2005 and the male reader-oriented Comic Yuri Hime S in 2007; the two magazines merged under the title Comic Yuri Hime in 2010. [52] Stories in these magazines dealt with a range of themes, from intense emotional connections such as those depicted in Voiceful (2004–2006), to sexually-explicit schoolgirl romances like those portrayed in First Love Sisters (2003–2008),[53] and realistic tales about love between adult women such as those seen in The Conditions of Paradise (2007). [54] Some of these subjects are seen in male-targeted works of this period as well,[55][56] sometimes in combination with other themes, including mecha and science fiction. [57][58] Examples include series such as Kannazuki no Miko (2004–2005), Blue Drop (2004–2008), and Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl (2004–2007). In addition, male-targeted stories tend to make extensive use of moe and bishōjo characterizations. [59] The publication of yuri magazines had the effect of nurturing a "yuri culture" that influenced artists to create works depicting female same-sex relationships.
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