Ecchi: Perbezaan antara semakan

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{{nihongo|'''''Ecchi'''''|エッチ|etchi|extra={{IPA-ja|et.tɕi|pron}}}} adalah sebuah terma [[slanga]] dalam bahasa Jepun yang biasa digunakan untuk [[fantasi erotik]] dan [[sindiran]] seksual. Sebagai [[adjektif]] ia biasa digunakan untukl menyatakan "cabul", "nakal", "sembrono"; sebagai [[kata kerja]] (ecchi suru), bermaksud melakukan cabul, nakal, sembrono atau tidur bersama; atau sebagai [[kata nama]], menyatakan seseorang dilihat sebagai seorang ecchi. Perkataan sinonimnya iaitu ''ero'' (daripada [[Eros]]) dan tidak mempunyai apa-apa makna yang keras seperti [[hentai]].
{{nihongo|'''''Ecchi'''''|エッチ|etchi|extra={{IPA-ja|et.tɕi|pron}}}} adalah sebuah terma [[slanga]] dalam bahasa Jepun yang biasa digunakan untuk [[fantasi erotik]] dan [[sindiran]] seksual. Sebagai [[adjektif]] ia biasa digunakan untukl menyatakan "cabul", "nakal", "sembrono"; sebagai [[kata kerja]] (ecchi suru), bermaksud melakukan cabul, nakal, sembrono atau tidur bersama; atau sebagai [[kata nama]], menyatakan seseorang dilihat sebagai seorang ecchi. Perkataan sinonimnya iaitu ''ero'' (daripada [[Eros]]) dan tidak mempunyai apa-apa makna yang keras seperti [[hentai]].


Perkataan ini tidak hanya digunakan di Jepun, ia juga digunakan di seluruh dunia dalam fandom media Jepun untuk menggambarkan tema atau bersifat seksual. Perkataan ''ecchi'' juga boleh bermaksud apa-apa daripada sederhana kepada menghina dalam bahasa Jepun, ia digunakan dalam budaya Barat untuk membahagikan antara pornografi (hentai) dan penggunaan suka bermain imej seksual (ecchi).<ref name="s.keller-2008"/> Kerja yang dianggap sebagai ecchi tidak menunjukkan apa-apa [[persetubuhan]] atau [[ciri-ciri seksual rendah]]. Bagaimanapun, ia bergantung kepada tahap imaginasi penilaian penonton sendiri. Dalam media sebegitu, ia selalu digunakan bersama [[servis peminat]] dalam cara yang kelakar. Jenis tema atau bersifat seksual ini hanya didapati dalam [[manga]] [[Shōnen]]/[[Seinen]] dan [[anime]] [[harem]].<ref name="r.brenner">Robin E. Brenner: ''Understanding manga and anime.'' Libraries Unlimited, 2007, ISBN 978-1-59158-332-5, p. 89.</ref><ref name="askjohn">Ask John: [http://www.animenation.net/blog/2005/05/20/ask-john-why-do-americans-hate-harem-anime/ Why Do Americans Hate Harem Anime?]. animenation.net. May 20. 2005. ''Nota: servis peminat dan ecchi selalu dianggap satu perkataan yang sama''</ref>
Perkataan ini tidak hanya digunakan di Jepun, ia juga digunakan di seluruh dunia dalam fandom media Jepun untuk menggambarkan tema atau bersifat seksual. Perkataan ''ecchi'' juga boleh bermaksud apa-apa daripada sederhana kepada menghina dalam bahasa Jepun, ia digunakan dalam budaya Barat untuk membahagikan antara pornografi (hentai) dan penggunaan suka bermain imej seksual (ecchi).<ref name="s.keller-2008" /> Kerja yang dianggap sebagai ecchi tidak menunjukkan apa-apa [[persetubuhan]] atau [[ciri-ciri seksual rendah]]. Bagaimanapun, ia bergantung kepada tahap imaginasi penilaian penonton sendiri. Dalam media sebegitu, ia selalu digunakan bersama [[servis peminat]] dalam cara yang kelakar. Jenis tema atau bersifat seksual ini hanya didapati dalam [[manga]] [[Shōnen]]/[[Seinen]] dan [[anime]] [[harem]].<ref name="r.brenner">Robin E. Brenner: ''Understanding manga and anime.'' Libraries Unlimited, 2007, ISBN 978-1-59158-332-5, p. 89.</ref><ref name="askjohn">Ask John: [http://www.animenation.net/blog/2005/05/20/ask-john-why-do-americans-hate-harem-anime/ Why Do Americans Hate Harem Anime?]. animenation.net. May 20. 2005. ''Nota: servis peminat dan ecchi selalu dianggap satu perkataan yang sama''</ref>


== Etimologi dan penggunaan dalam Jepun ==
== Etimologi dan penggunaan dalam Jepun ==
Transkripsi yang betul bagi perkataan ini adalah {{lang|ja|エッチ}} selepas [[perumian Hepburn|Hepburn]] iaitu “etchi”, menandakan penggunaan di Jepun.<ref>Selepas lihat sumber artikel {{en}} [[en:Hepburn romanization|perumian Hepburn]]. Dalam Hepburn, [[sokuon]] (っ, ''tsu'' kecil) telah dirumikan sebagai ''t'' sebelum ''ch''.</ref> Maksud terkini ''ecchi'' tidak terlalu jauh dengan “[[hentai]]” ({{lang|ja|変態}}).
Transkripsi yang betul bagi perkataan ini adalah {{lang|ja|エッチ}} selepas [[perumian Hepburn|Hepburn]] iaitu “etchi”, menandakan penggunaan di Jepun.<ref>Selepas lihat sumber artikel {{en}} [[en:Hepburn romanization|perumian Hepburn]]. Dalam Hepburn, [[sokuon]] (っ, ''tsu'' kecil) telah dirumikan sebagai ''t'' sebelum ''ch''.</ref> Maksud terkini ''ecchi'' tidak terlalu jauh dengan “[[hentai]]” ({{lang|ja|変態}}).


“Hentai” itself was introduced in the [[Meiji period]] as a term for ''change of form'' or ''transformation'' in [[science]] and [[psychology]]. In context, it was used to refer to disorders such as [[hysteria]] or to describe [[paranormal phenomena]] like [[hypnosis]] and [[telepathy]].<ref name="hikaru-2004">{{cite book |last=Hikaru |first=Saitō |title=Hentai—H |pages=45–58 |publisher=Kōdansha gendaishinsho |year=2004 |edition=Kansai seiyoku kenkyūkai |series=Sei no yōgoshū}}</ref> Further spreading the word led to the connotation of ''non standard''. In the 1910s, it was used in [[sexology]] as the compound expression “hentai seiyoku” ({{lang|ja|変態性欲}}, ''abnormal sexual desire'')<ref>{{cite book |first=Jennifer |last=Robertson |title=Gender and the State in Japan |publisher=The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research |volume=Vol. 64 |series=Theatrical Resistance, Theatres of Restraint: The Takarazuka Revue and the "State Theatre" Movement in Japan |year=1991 |pages=165–177}}</ref> and became popular within the theory of sexual deviance (''Hentai seiyoku ron''), published by Eiji Habuto and Jun′ichirō Sawada in 1915.<ref>{{cite book |first=Jennifer |last=Robertson |title=Dying to Tell: Sexuality and Suicide in Imperial Japan |publisher=The University of Chicago Press |volume=Vol.25 |year=1999 |page=21}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first=Jim |last=Reichert |title=Deviance and Social Darwinism in Edogawa Ranpo's Erotic-Grotesque Thriller "Kotō no oni" |series=Journal of Japanese Studies |publisher=The Society for Japanese Studies |volume=Vol. 27 |page=128}}</ref> In the 1920s, many publications targeted a broad audience, dealing with deviant sexual appearances, including works related to the [[Ero guro|Ero Guro Nansensu]] movement. Matsuzawa calls it a period characterized by a ''“hetai boom”''.<ref>[[Goichi Matsuzawa]] (1997). ''Meiji, Taishō, Shōwa, kindai fūzoku shuppan no rekishi, Ero no hon''. Tokyo. Wani no ana. p. 55</ref> In the 1930s began a new western influenced period of censorship which resulted in progressive stop of publication.<ref>[[Sabine Frühstück]] (2003). ''Colonizing Sex: Sexology and Social Control in Modern Japan''. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-23548-7. p. 15</ref>
“Hentai” mempunyai maksud yang tersendiri semasa [[era Meiji]] iatiu ''perubahan bentuk'' atau ''transformasi'' dalam [[sains]] dan [[psikologi]]. Dalam konteks, ia telah digunakan untuk merujuk kepada gangguan seperti [[histeria]] atau untuk menggambarkan [[fenomena paranormal]] seperti [[hipnosis]] dan [[telepati]].<ref name="hikaru-2004">{{cite book |last=Hikaru |first=Saitō |title=Hentai—H |pages=45–58 |publisher=Kōdansha gendaishinsho |year=2004 |edition=Kansai seiyoku kenkyūkai |series=Sei no yōgoshū}}</ref> Lagi menyebarkan perkataan yang membawa kepada konotasi ''bukan standard''. Pada 1910-an, ia telah digunakan dalam [[seksologi]] sebagai perkarangan ungkapan "hentai seiyoku" ({{lang|ja|変態性欲}}, ''abnormal sexual desire'')<ref>{{cite book |first=Jennifer |last=Robertson |title=Gender and the State in Japan |publisher=The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research |volume=Vol. 64 |series=Theatrical Resistance, Theatres of Restraint: The Takarazuka Revue and the "State Theatre" Movement in Japan |year=1991 |pages=165–177}}</ref> and became popular within the theory of sexual deviance (''Hentai seiyoku ron''), published by Eiji Habuto and Jun′ichirō Sawada in 1915.<ref>{{cite book |first=Jennifer |last=Robertson |title=Dying to Tell: Sexuality and Suicide in Imperial Japan |publisher=The University of Chicago Press |volume=Vol.25 |year=1999 |page=21}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first=Jim |last=Reichert |title=Deviance and Social Darwinism in Edogawa Ranpo's Erotic-Grotesque Thriller "Kotō no oni" |series=Journal of Japanese Studies |publisher=The Society for Japanese Studies |volume=Vol. 27 |page=128}}</ref> In the 1920s, many publications targeted a broad audience, dealing with deviant sexual appearances, including works related to the [[Ero guro|Ero Guro Nansensu]] movement. Matsuzawa calls it a period characterized by a ''“hetai boom”''.<ref>[[Goichi Matsuzawa]] (1997). ''Meiji, Taishō, Shōwa, kindai fūzoku shuppan no rekishi, Ero no hon''. Tokyo. Wani no ana. p. 55</ref> In the 1930s began a new western influenced period of censorship which resulted in progressive stop of publication.<ref>[[Sabine Frühstück]] (2003). ''Colonizing Sex: Sexology and Social Control in Modern Japan''. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-23548-7. p. 15</ref>


After the war, in the 1950s, new journals showed an interest in hentai. With this renewed interest, the word hentai is sometimes written in [[romaji]] and it was then that ''H'' (pronounced as {{lang|ja|エッチ}}, as the pronunciation of the English letter H, {{IPAc-en|ˈ|eɪ|tʃ}}) began to be used as an alternative to “hentai”. In 1952, the magazine ''[[Shukan Asahi]]'' reported that a woman who was groped by a stranger in a movie theater reacted with ''"ara etchi yo"'' (''"hey, it's a pervert"''). In this context, “etchi” must be understood as ''sexually inappropriate'' and is synonymous to ''iyarashii'' ({{lang|ja|嫌らしい}}, unpleasant, dirty or disgusting) or ''sukebe'' ({{lang|ja|すけべ}}, a pervert). From that moment, the meaning of “hentai” and “etchi” evolved independently. In the 1960s, etchi started to be used by the youth to refer to [[sex]] in general. In 1965, a newspaper reported that primary school children using ''etchi kotoba'' (the word ''sexy''). In the 1980s, it was used to mean ''sex'' as in the phrase ''etchi suru'' (to [make] love).<ref name="hikaru-2004"/><ref>[[Mark McLelland]] (2006). ''A Short History of <nowiki>'Hentai'</nowiki>''. In: ''Intersections: Gender, History and Culture in the Asian Context''. Vol. 12.</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Cunningham | first = Phillip J. | title = Zakennayo! | page = 30 | publisher = Penguin Group | year = 1995}}</ref> The most common theory states that it derives from the first character of the word {{nihongo|''[[hentai]]''|変態}},<ref>{{cite web | url = http://gogen-allguide.com/e/h.html | title = エッチ | publisher = 語源由来辞典 | language = Japanese}}</ref>
After the war, in the 1950s, new journals showed an interest in hentai. With this renewed interest, the word hentai is sometimes written in [[romaji]] and it was then that ''H'' (pronounced as {{lang|ja|エッチ}}, as the pronunciation of the English letter H, {{IPAc-en|ˈ|eɪ|tʃ}}) began to be used as an alternative to “hentai”. In 1952, the magazine ''[[Shukan Asahi]]'' reported that a woman who was groped by a stranger in a movie theater reacted with ''"ara etchi yo"'' (''"hey, it's a pervert"''). In this context, “etchi” must be understood as ''sexually inappropriate'' and is synonymous to ''iyarashii'' ({{lang|ja|嫌らしい}}, unpleasant, dirty or disgusting) or ''sukebe'' ({{lang|ja|すけべ}}, a pervert). From that moment, the meaning of “hentai” and “etchi” evolved independently. In the 1960s, etchi started to be used by the youth to refer to [[sex]] in general. In 1965, a newspaper reported that primary school children using ''etchi kotoba'' (the word ''sexy''). In the 1980s, it was used to mean ''sex'' as in the phrase ''etchi suru'' (to [make] love).<ref name="hikaru-2004"/><ref>[[Mark McLelland]] (2006). ''A Short History of <nowiki>'Hentai'</nowiki>''. In: ''Intersections: Gender, History and Culture in the Asian Context''. Vol. 12.</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Cunningham | first = Phillip J. | title = Zakennayo! | page = 30 | publisher = Penguin Group | year = 1995}}</ref> The most common theory states that it derives from the first character of the word {{nihongo|''[[hentai]]''|変態}},<ref>{{cite web | url = http://gogen-allguide.com/e/h.html | title = エッチ | publisher = 語源由来辞典 | language = Japanese}}</ref>

Semakan pada 16:38, 4 Ogos 2013

Templat:18sx

Baju yang kecil atau jarang (basah atau tidak) adalah elemen yang biasa digunakan dalam ecchi.

Ecchi (Jepun: エッチ, Hepburn: etchi, disebut [et.tɕi]) adalah sebuah terma slanga dalam bahasa Jepun yang biasa digunakan untuk fantasi erotik dan sindiran seksual. Sebagai adjektif ia biasa digunakan untukl menyatakan "cabul", "nakal", "sembrono"; sebagai kata kerja (ecchi suru), bermaksud melakukan cabul, nakal, sembrono atau tidur bersama; atau sebagai kata nama, menyatakan seseorang dilihat sebagai seorang ecchi. Perkataan sinonimnya iaitu ero (daripada Eros) dan tidak mempunyai apa-apa makna yang keras seperti hentai.

Perkataan ini tidak hanya digunakan di Jepun, ia juga digunakan di seluruh dunia dalam fandom media Jepun untuk menggambarkan tema atau bersifat seksual. Perkataan ecchi juga boleh bermaksud apa-apa daripada sederhana kepada menghina dalam bahasa Jepun, ia digunakan dalam budaya Barat untuk membahagikan antara pornografi (hentai) dan penggunaan suka bermain imej seksual (ecchi).[1] Kerja yang dianggap sebagai ecchi tidak menunjukkan apa-apa persetubuhan atau ciri-ciri seksual rendah. Bagaimanapun, ia bergantung kepada tahap imaginasi penilaian penonton sendiri. Dalam media sebegitu, ia selalu digunakan bersama servis peminat dalam cara yang kelakar. Jenis tema atau bersifat seksual ini hanya didapati dalam manga Shōnen/Seinen dan anime harem.[2][3]

Etimologi dan penggunaan dalam Jepun

Transkripsi yang betul bagi perkataan ini adalah エッチ selepas Hepburn iaitu “etchi”, menandakan penggunaan di Jepun.[4] Maksud terkini ecchi tidak terlalu jauh dengan “hentai” (変態).

“Hentai” mempunyai maksud yang tersendiri semasa era Meiji iatiu perubahan bentuk atau transformasi dalam sains dan psikologi. Dalam konteks, ia telah digunakan untuk merujuk kepada gangguan seperti histeria atau untuk menggambarkan fenomena paranormal seperti hipnosis dan telepati.[5] Lagi menyebarkan perkataan yang membawa kepada konotasi bukan standard. Pada 1910-an, ia telah digunakan dalam seksologi sebagai perkarangan ungkapan "hentai seiyoku" (変態性欲, abnormal sexual desire)[6] and became popular within the theory of sexual deviance (Hentai seiyoku ron), published by Eiji Habuto and Jun′ichirō Sawada in 1915.[7][8] In the 1920s, many publications targeted a broad audience, dealing with deviant sexual appearances, including works related to the Ero Guro Nansensu movement. Matsuzawa calls it a period characterized by a “hetai boom”.[9] In the 1930s began a new western influenced period of censorship which resulted in progressive stop of publication.[10]

After the war, in the 1950s, new journals showed an interest in hentai. With this renewed interest, the word hentai is sometimes written in romaji and it was then that H (pronounced as エッチ, as the pronunciation of the English letter H, /ˈ/) began to be used as an alternative to “hentai”. In 1952, the magazine Shukan Asahi reported that a woman who was groped by a stranger in a movie theater reacted with "ara etchi yo" ("hey, it's a pervert"). In this context, “etchi” must be understood as sexually inappropriate and is synonymous to iyarashii (嫌らしい, unpleasant, dirty or disgusting) or sukebe (すけべ, a pervert). From that moment, the meaning of “hentai” and “etchi” evolved independently. In the 1960s, etchi started to be used by the youth to refer to sex in general. In 1965, a newspaper reported that primary school children using etchi kotoba (the word sexy). In the 1980s, it was used to mean sex as in the phrase etchi suru (to [make] love).[5][11][12] The most common theory states that it derives from the first character of the word hentai (Jepun: 変態),[13]

The word sekkusu is also used in Japan for sex, and Japanese native words for sex (such as 性交 seikō) are often replaced by words of foreign origin such as sekkusu or neologisms such as ecchi. Therefore, ecchi is used as a qualifier for anything that is related to erotic or pornographic content. The nuance of ecchi varies with context, but in general, the word itself is comparable to the English words "naughty" or "dirty" (when used as an adjective). In pornographic context, the word ero and other wordings are preferred over etchi by the media. For example ero-manga (エロ), adult anime (アダルト), or anime / manga for persons over 18 years (18禁アニメ, 18禁), and so on. The prefix "H-" is also sometimes used to refer to pornographic genres: H-anime, H-manga, etc.

Western usage

In western nations, the spelling as ecchi is preferred, although it does not follow the Hepburn method. This has its origin in the foreign fandom of manga and anime, which used a different method (or no method at all) to transcribe the word. In comparison to hentai, which "is anime erotica", it was adapted "among coy fans and distributors who preferred to use a foreign term for their pornography" in the west, the abbreviation ecchi is seen as softer in meaning than the full term. Calling a Japanese boy e(t/c)chi might be flirtatious, as opposed to the more insulting hentai.[14]

[...] Bezeichnet erotische Darstellungen. Im Vergleich zu Hentai weniger explizit.
[...] [Ecchi] refers to erotic depictions. In comparison to hentai, it is less explicit.
—Sebastian Keller, Der Manga und seine Szene in Deutschland von den Anfängen in den 1980er Jahren bis zur Gegenwart: Manga- mehr als nur große Augen[1]

The term ecchi is used to describe a category of manga and anime with sexually oriented content, that is common in works aimed at a predominantly male audience (shōnen or seinen). But also works aimed at a female audience can contain scenes which are seen as ecchi. Examples are R-18 Love Report! from Emiko Sugi and Oruchuban Ebichu from Risa Itō, which are aimed at the shōjo and josei audience, but contain rather explicit content.[2][3]

This can be conversations with sexual references or misunderstandings about sexuality in dialogs (double meaning, words taken out of context), misunderstandings in visual depictions (the position or pose of a character is suggestive), clothing (underwear, cosplay, fetish clothing, etc.), nudity (ripped apart clothing, wet clothing, clothing malfuncations, etc.) and the portrayal of certain actions (touch or look at parts of the body). This kind of sexuality is commonly used for comical effect. A typical example scene would contain a male protagonist that accidentally enters a women-only bath or trips over a female character, leaving the impression of sexual harassment.

The concept of ecchi is very close related to fan service. While fan service describes every aspect to please the fans, ecchi relates to sexual themes. A special kind of fan service, that is usually bound or justified by the narrative.[15]

Typical examples

There are many possibilities to classify a work itself as ecchi, but this elements have to occur quite often (for example in all episodes of an anime). Graphically speaking, different techniques are used to show sexy pictures, usually by revealing parts of the female body. Some of these patterns are recurrent, such as scenes in a shower, onsen, or fighting scenes in which clothes are torn apart by weapons or magic. This involves the back, buttocks or even breasts and panchira. The imagination of characters is also a common excuse to show its sexual fantasies, as well as transformation scenes of magical girls. In the end, any excuse is valid to show a character partially or completely nude.[16]

Nudity

Censorship with artificial light rays is one common method to hide some elements in anime television series. The degree of censorship can vary widely across television stations, even among those broadcasting the series at the same time.

The level of nudity varies strongly between works, because of the intended audience and the preferences of the authors. In some cases, though the breasts are shown on the screen, nipples and genitals are obscured by smoke, moss, hair, clothing, a decorative element, a light effect, etc. This kind of censorship was typical for Lala in To Love-Ru, Blair in Soul Eater or even Asuka Langley Soryu from Neon Genesis Evangelion. In Ladies versus Butlers! and other anime, the nipples are clearly visible through clothing, no matter how thick it is.

A typical reaction to nudity is nosebleeding, which represents sexual arousal. Rather extreme examples are Baka to Test to Shōkanjū and Maria†Holic. In both cases, the characters “nearly die” because of constant blood loss. In Baka to Test to Shōkanjū, the male characters are confronted with nice girls (including the trap Hideyoshi Kinoshita). In Maria†Holic, the main protagonist is the lesbian Kanako Miyamae. Despite her forbidden love, she joins an all-girls school, which leads often to excessive nosebleed, unable to stand up to her adversary, Maria. Despite the fact she knows that Maria is a man (also a trap), she still falls for his feminine appearance.

Pantsu

The visibility of the underwear (panties) is one common motif. It often leads to strange reactions between a female and the male protagonist, who would accidentally (or not) look at the underwear. The reaction can be quite varied, depending on the color and style of pantsu, but usually the male is punished for looking, regardless of the reason. The color and style of the pantsu is not chosen at random. Both are seen as an indication for the female's character. Innocent females wear simple white or kawaii themed underwear (with hearts or similar motifs), shy girls prefer the shimapan (striped panties); in some cultures red is seen as 'of the devil' or "naughty," etc.

The pantsu theme itself is so popular, that it is an important object in anime like Chobits or Sora no Otoshimono. Coincidently, both anime's fourth episodes are based on the pantsu theme as a narrative element alone. The anime Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt goes another step further, in which pantsu is used as a weapon. But even if the pantsu is not the main topic itself, it is often shown due to a "careful choice" of camera angles. In this case, it can be rightfully called fan service, since it is not needed for the story itself.

Sexual intercourse

Normally, there is no sex in manga or anime which are considered ecchi. Such works are known as hentai, a form of animated pornography. But it is still possible to make a pun on sexual intercourse through misunderstandings. One simple example would be two characters searching for some kind of item, which appears from the outside, only showing the silhouette, as if both would have an actual intercourse.[16]

References

  1. ^ a b Sebastian Keller: Der Manga und seine Szene in Deutschland von den Anfängen in den 1980er Jahren bis zur Gegenwart: Manga- mehr als nur große Augen, GRIN Verlag, 2008, ISBN 978-3-638-94029-0, p. 127
  2. ^ a b Robin E. Brenner: Understanding manga and anime. Libraries Unlimited, 2007, ISBN 978-1-59158-332-5, p. 89.
  3. ^ a b Ask John: Why Do Americans Hate Harem Anime?. animenation.net. May 20. 2005. Nota: servis peminat dan ecchi selalu dianggap satu perkataan yang sama
  4. ^ Selepas lihat sumber artikel (Inggeris) . Dalam Hepburn, sokuon (っ, tsu kecil) telah dirumikan sebagai t sebelum ch.
  5. ^ a b Hikaru, Saitō (2004). Hentai—H. Sei no yōgoshū (ed. Kansai seiyoku kenkyūkai). Kōdansha gendaishinsho. m/s. 45–58.
  6. ^ Robertson, Jennifer (1991). Gender and the State in Japan. Theatrical Resistance, Theatres of Restraint: The Takarazuka Revue and the "State Theatre" Movement in Japan. Vol. 64. The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research. m/s. 165–177. |volume= has extra text (bantuan)
  7. ^ Robertson, Jennifer (1999). Dying to Tell: Sexuality and Suicide in Imperial Japan. Vol.25. The University of Chicago Press. m/s. 21. |volume= has extra text (bantuan)
  8. ^ Reichert, Jim. Deviance and Social Darwinism in Edogawa Ranpo's Erotic-Grotesque Thriller "Kotō no oni". Journal of Japanese Studies. Vol. 27. The Society for Japanese Studies. m/s. 128. |volume= has extra text (bantuan)
  9. ^ Goichi Matsuzawa (1997). Meiji, Taishō, Shōwa, kindai fūzoku shuppan no rekishi, Ero no hon. Tokyo. Wani no ana. p. 55
  10. ^ Sabine Frühstück (2003). Colonizing Sex: Sexology and Social Control in Modern Japan. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-23548-7. p. 15
  11. ^ Mark McLelland (2006). A Short History of 'Hentai'. In: Intersections: Gender, History and Culture in the Asian Context. Vol. 12.
  12. ^ Cunningham, Phillip J. (1995). Zakennayo!. Penguin Group. m/s. 30.
  13. ^ "エッチ" (dalam bahasa Japanese). 語源由来辞典.CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  14. ^ Jonathan Clements, Helen McCarthy: The anime encyclopedia: a guide to Japanese animation since 1917, Edition 2, Stone Bridge Press, 2006, University of California, ISBN 1-933330-10-4, p. 30
  15. ^ Robin E. Brenner: Understanding Manga and Anime. Libraries Unlimited, 2007, ISBN 1-59158-332-2, p. 295
  16. ^ a b Steiff, Josef; Tamplin, Tristan D. (2010). Anime and Philosophy. Popular Culture and Philosophy. Vol. 47. Open Court Puplishing. ISBN 978-0-8126-9670-7. |volume= has extra text (bantuan)