Swan: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
prefix>Import Bot
(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Manga.Swan 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Manga.Swan, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
(wppage)
 
(8 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{work}}
{{work|wppage=Swan (manga)}}
[[File:swan1.jpg|frame]]
[[File:swan1.jpg|frame]]
''Swan'' (1976-1981), by Kyoko Ariyoshi, is a classic ballet manga from [[The Seventies]], and is notable for being one of the very few [[Shoujo]] manga from that era to have been published in English.<ref>Sadly, CMX were only able to release 15 volumes out of 21 before closing down, and the series is now out of print to boot.</ref> The plot follows aspiring young dancer Masumi Hijiri as she pursues her dream to become a star ballerina. Friendships, rivalries, dance competitions, love triangles and oldschool melodrama ensue, along with the kind of vigorous training that makes ''Swan'' feel like [[Shoujo]]'s answer to [[Shounen]] sports manga.
'''''Swan''''' (1976-1981), by Kyoko Ariyoshi, is a classic ballet manga from [[The Seventies]], and is notable for being one of the very few [[Shoujo]] manga from that era to have been published in English.<ref>Sadly, CMX were only able to release 15 volumes out of 21 before closing down, and the series is now out of print to boot.</ref> The plot follows aspiring young dancer Masumi Hijiri as she pursues her dream to become a star ballerina. Friendships, rivalries, dance competitions, love triangles and oldschool melodrama ensue, along with the kind of vigorous training that makes ''Swan'' feel like [[Shoujo]]'s answer to [[Shounen]] sports manga.


----
----
{{tropelist}}
=== ''Swan'' provides examples of: ===

* [[Anguished Declaration of Love]]: Aoi and Masumi each get one.
* [[Anguished Declaration of Love]]: Aoi and Masumi each get one.
* [[Awesomeness By Analysis]]: Masumi
* [[Awesomeness By Analysis]]: Masumi
Line 17: Line 16:
* [[Driven to Suicide]]: {{spoiler|Sayoko slits her wrists after her injury, due to her anguish over the idea that she may never be able to dance the way she used to again. She survives.}}
* [[Driven to Suicide]]: {{spoiler|Sayoko slits her wrists after her injury, due to her anguish over the idea that she may never be able to dance the way she used to again. She survives.}}
* [[Dude Looks Like a Lady]]: Lucien, much to Masumi's confusion.
* [[Dude Looks Like a Lady]]: Lucien, much to Masumi's confusion.
* [[Et Tu Brute]]: Masumi's reaction when she finds out that Yuka quit dancing.
* [[Et Tu, Brute?]]: Masumi's reaction when she finds out that Yuka quit dancing.
* [[Fatal Flaw]]: Masumi's lack of musicality, the source of which turns out to be {{spoiler|occasional bouts of deafness, triggered by intense pressure and nerves.}}
* [[Fatal Flaw]]: Masumi's lack of musicality, the source of which turns out to be {{spoiler|occasional bouts of deafness, triggered by intense pressure and nerves.}}
* [[Follow in My Footsteps]]: Poor Aoishi is under a lot of pressure from her mother to become a star ballerina.
* [[Follow in My Footsteps]]: Poor Aoishi is under a lot of pressure from her mother to become a star ballerina.
* [[Generation Xerox]]: Masumi and Aoishi's rivalry echoes the rivalry shared by their mothers.
* [[Generation Xerox]]: Masumi and Aoishi's rivalry echoes the rivalry shared by their mothers.
* [[Heroic BSOD]]: Sayoko, {{spoiler|after she gets injured.}} Masumi also has a couple of these.
* [[Heroic BSOD]]: Sayoko, {{spoiler|after she gets injured.}} Masumi also has a couple of these.
* [[Heroic Self Deprecation]]: Masumi and Sayoko both suffer from this.
* [[Heroic Self-Deprecation]]: Masumi and Sayoko both suffer from this.
* [[Jerk With a Heart of Gold]]: Leon, emphasis on the "jerk" part. Also Larissa.
* [[Jerk with a Heart of Gold]]: Leon, emphasis on the "jerk" part. Also Larissa.
* [[Long Haired Pretty Boy]]: Aoi and Lucien.
* [[Long-Haired Pretty Boy]]: Aoi and Lucien.
* [[Love Triangle]]: Aoi loves Masumi, who loves Kusakabe, who loves Masumi but loves his partner Sayoko more. And then there's the [[Ho Yay]].
* [[Love Triangle]]: Aoi loves Masumi, who loves Kusakabe, who loves Masumi but loves his partner Sayoko more. And then there's the [[Ho Yay]].
* [[Love Hurts]]
* [[Love Hurts]]
Line 41: Line 40:
* [[To Be a Master]]: The main thrust of the plot.
* [[To Be a Master]]: The main thrust of the plot.
* [[Tournament Arc]]: The various dance competitions take this form.
* [[Tournament Arc]]: The various dance competitions take this form.
* [[Training From Hell]]
* [[Training from Hell]]
* [[Wingding Eyes]]: Masumi gets star-shaped eyes when she sees [[Guy On Guy Is Hot|Leon and Luci kissing.]]
* [[Wingding Eyes]]: Masumi gets star-shaped eyes when she sees [[Guy-On-Guy Is Hot|Leon and Luci kissing.]]


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:The Seventies]]
[[Category:The Seventies]]
[[Category:Gaming and Sports Anime And Manga]]
[[Category:Manga]]
[[Category:Manga]]
[[Category:Manga of the 1970s]]
[[Category:Gaming and Sports Anime and Manga]]
[[Category:Shoujo Demographic]]
[[Category:Shoujo Demographic]]
[[Category:Swan]]

Latest revision as of 16:52, 2 August 2020

Swan (1976-1981), by Kyoko Ariyoshi, is a classic ballet manga from The Seventies, and is notable for being one of the very few Shoujo manga from that era to have been published in English.[1] The plot follows aspiring young dancer Masumi Hijiri as she pursues her dream to become a star ballerina. Friendships, rivalries, dance competitions, love triangles and oldschool melodrama ensue, along with the kind of vigorous training that makes Swan feel like Shoujo's answer to Shounen sports manga.


Tropes used in Swan include:
  1. Sadly, CMX were only able to release 15 volumes out of 21 before closing down, and the series is now out of print to boot.