Alexander wrote:Ryan, you win. I admit defeat.
I searched through various sites, and the result is the same. Otaku is an insult to those who obsess over anime. And not just to that, but any obsession in general.
*sighs* Now I feel silly for defending the term in the first place. *goes to collect fallen pride*
Although stereotypically male, there are also many female otaku. A small alleyway of Tokyo's Higashi Ikebukuro district is known as "Otome Road" ("Maiden's road"). Otome Road's otome are a cross-section of Japanese womanhood, with ages ranging from teenage junior high school girls to housewives in their late 40s. A feature of the area is that there are so many bookstores devoted to comics and books filled with stories about homosexual men, in a genre called Boys' Love or BL. Dōjinshi, manga produced by amateur fans, dominate the shelves along Otome Road, with a significant chunk of the comics' stories about more famous anime that imitate, parody or develop on characters who are usually household names in Japan.
Keyblade Warrior, Not all Otakus have a sheep-like opinion of anime. Even I have some titles I could do without.
Raiden no Kishi wrote:Yeah . . . the traditional Japanese meaning of the word, as I understand it, is "fanatic" or similar, and it is not a badge of honor or compliment.
However, most of American fandom takes it as a term for all fans of anime or related media. It's a shame, IMO, since I believe terms shouldn't be twisted like that.
Ergo, the only sensible answer is "lol house". Which means that Hugh Laurie plays the cynical, sarcastic, but talented Dr. Otaku. Give it up.
.rai//
Bobtheduck wrote:No, otaku is the honorific form of house. The neutral, polite form being uchi. Anime fans were called "otaku" because they began to use the more flowery and long-winded honorific forms of words when talking to each other, hence they would say "Otaku" instead of "uchi"
The word became slang for obsessive and socially inept anime fans, and eventually, for any fandom, be it weapons, anime, manga, science fiction movies, certain types of music, or porn.
The term used as slang definitely has the connotations of "loser" in Japan, but most of us aren't in Japan, and here it just means "anime fan"
I don't see the problem with it...
FiFi wrote:They also say, "ITS SO KAWAII," even after being repeatedly told that, "kawaii," means, "Its so cute," so they need not add the 'its so,'
Mitsukai wrote:I'd pay money to see someone try to insult me by calling me an otaku.
FiFi wrote:<_< In all my version of Otaku are the mainstream anime fans who only watch titles from Adult Swim (Watase Yuu things) and have adapted themselves to squealing in high pitched tones all day long. They also say, "ITS SO KAWAII," even after being repeatedly told that, "kawaii," means, "Its so cute," so they need not add the 'its so,'
>< I certainly don't hate the otakus (or otakus as I see them) because I don't hate anyone. Just, I feel that they give anime fans who aren't completely and totally obsessed a bad name.
Alexander wrote:Unfortunately, it seems our opinion is outnumbered. XD
Bobtheduck wrote:That's not an opinion... That is the factual origin for the word. It does mean house in Japanese, you can look it up in any Japanese - English dictionary, and for the story behind it? Well, I don't have my source for it, never do... I don't generally save those things, particularly not in an organized way. I read it in doing research for a paper in community college, though. The reason it became slang for anime fans was because really hardcore anime fans had a habit of overusing honorifics (such as Otaku.)
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