Ooku Episode 1 Notes
Oh, woe is me. I planned to rewatch Ooku and see how well it all fit into my framework outlined in the previous post, but on rewatching episode 1 was hit with such density I decided to go through it more slowly, in a notes format. It definitely seems like Fumi Yoshinaga alternates between what I would consider serious structural worldbuilding, and kind of potboiler provocations, with some contradiction between the two. This makes sense, as this is a manga intended for entertainment and not a real scholarly treatise on how a country would actually biopolitically adapt to a situation where there was a 1:4 ratio between men and women. The tension therefore makes sense from a dramatic sensibility, even though it throws my theoretical edifice into chaos. No matter: Let's look through Episode 1 of Ooku from my structural framework and see what we can learn. Episode One We start with pure reproductive futurity and dramatic pathos, as a young farmer boy, presumed heir to the family line, ...