Talk:Shotacon

Jumping in and moving over this discussion


 * Shota can also refer to the type of young boys those with a shotacon are attracted to. In others, he is paired with a female, which the general community would call straight shota or a male which would be more yaoi or "boys' love" type.'

The last phrase repeats the first part of the excerpt, so seems oddly placed or worded.

The connection between "shotagon" and "yaoi" seems more complicated than them being equivalent or partially equivalent (Wikipedia yaoi article and Wikipedia shotagon article).

Perhaps the solution is to split off the disputed part-sentence and write in a more nuanced paragraph of origins? Including the point that equating adult gay relationships with child abuse is a common way of attempting to gain acceptance for child abusers (Wikipedia NABLA article) or demonizing gay people (wikipedia homophobia article - see image caption).

(Yes, I know Wikipedia is sometimes an unreliable source, but it's generally good at laying out controversial subjects).

This seems to be a solution that would be both informative to the reader and an accurate depiction of the link between the two genres.

Note: this is not an official Fandom ruling, just comments on the dispute.-- Sannse (help forum | blog) 17:52, 9 November 2022 (UTC)

That is an idea, for the first part replacing this paragraph:


 * Shota can also refer to the type of young boys those with a shotacon are attracted to. In others, he is paired with a female, which the general community would call straight shota or a male which would be more yaoi or "boys' love" type.'

With the text:


 * Shota can also refer to the type of young boys those with a shotacon are attracted to. Shotacon of both genders can be paired with male or female shota.

Is much more concise, and simply covers the facts succinctly.


 * Including the point that equating adult gay relationships with child abuse is a common way of attempting to gain acceptance for child abusers (Wikipedia NABLA article) or demonizing gay people (wikipedia homophobia article - see image caption).

That could also be a plan since it explains why bad faith practices in the past would include the words together, essentially to demean adult gay relationships. The International Lesbian and Gay Association rejected groups like NAMBLA who tried to attach themselves to their movements. Yaoi can also disavow shotacon should it attempted to be attached to what it deals with.

Ultimately, moving into the future and leaving harmful practices behind established by others behind, readers viewing the shotacon page should not be seeing references to yaoi or boys love (again “boys love” is a genre largely formed by women and is a figure of speech akin to “having a boyfriend” it is not literally a boy) they will not find underage child content in such spaces. Likewise readers of yaoi will not have to come across underage content by bad faith actors looking to add it for the purposes of diminishing the yaoi genre. --S3r0-Ph1i (talk) 19:02, 9 November 2022 (UTC)


 * I don't have more time to look into this at the moment, I spent too much time looking up definitions yesterday basically to find that the terms and definitions are made up and not consistent. I will look at it more later, and it may be that these sub-categories may need a separate article. Also, I see no value in adding in non anime/mange relate items like NAMBLA. Sxerks (talk) 02:35, 10 November 2022 (UTC)

"Also, I see no value in adding in non anime/mange relate items like NAMBLA."
 * That’s fair and makes sense, the idea was for comparisons purposes. If pedophile based groups attempt to attach themselves to mainstream and acceptable LGBTQIA+ groups they must be seen to fail, the same applies for shotacon trying to be tied in with yaoi.

Dated and perhaps not the best of faith edits slipped in on Wikipedia do (inaccurately) state shotacon originates as an offshoot from yaoi, but more like it was taped on. On the shotacon article: “the genre is rumored to have roots” rumoured highlights the misinformation. What is all really is: “shotacon is not an offshoot of yaoi, but we’ll say it is anyway so readers gain the homophobic impression that they are linked.”

Indeed terms are not currently consistent, but moving forward just as LGBTQIA+ resources are made more accurate and guide the consistency, yaoi should follow that. The LGBTQIA+ Wiki features nothing like “pedophilia is not linked to these groups” neither does the LGBTQIA+ Resources page it is taken for granted that there are no links. Likewise for yaoi and shotacon it shouldn’t even need to be clarified, it should be assumed they are unconnected. Readers of shotacon will not find what they like in yaoi anyway since by definition they are interested in undeveloped boys in sexual based situations, yaoi covers biologically matured people, it's a firm cut-off line. Updated and much more accurate consistency is the path forward. As LGBTQIA+ resources do not include pedophile based words at all, not having the words on the shotacon page, which the suggested: Shota can also refer to the type of young boys those with a shotacon are attracted to. Shotacon of both genders can be paired with male or female shota. Text achieves, again says everything needed and readers rightly won’t see it conflated with yaoi which is the best case outcome moving forward. --S3r0-Ph1i (talk) 08:41, 10 November 2022 (UTC)