Yuki no Touge, Tsurugi no Mai

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Des alternatives: Synonyms: Yuki no Touge, Ken no Mai, Snowy Ridge, Dance of the Blade
Japanese: 雪の峠・剣の舞
Auteur: Iwaaki, Hitoshi
Taper: Manga
Volumes: 1
Chapitres: 9
Statut: Finished
Publier: 1999-03-06 to 2021-03-06

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3.3
(3 Votes)
0.00%
66.67%
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33.33%
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Des alternatives: Synonyms: Yuki no Touge, Ken no Mai, Snowy Ridge, Dance of the Blade
Japanese: 雪の峠・剣の舞
Auteur: Iwaaki, Hitoshi
Taper: Manga
Volumes: 1
Chapitres: 9
Statut: Finished
Publier: 1999-03-06 to 2021-03-06
But
3.3
3 Votes
0.00%
66.67%
0.00%
33.33%
0.00%
0 En train de lire
0 Veux lire
0 Lis
Sommaire
1-4. Yuki no Touge
In the end of the Sengoku period, the great daimyo family of Satake is driven away from Hitachi-no-kuni to Dewa-no-kuni after the Sekigahara battle. They plan to build a new castle there, but the head of the family, Yoshinobu Satake, listens more to the young vassals' advice than that of the experienced chief vassals'. The experienced vassals oppose and start to plan something to defend their place...

5-9. Tsurugi no Mai
It's Sengoku period. Haruna, a daughter of a farmer family, gets herself raped and her family killed by hooligan warriors in the chaos of war. Using the funds she got of the Go stones stolen from the warriors, she joins the dojo of the famous Nobutsuna Kamiizumi to learn kenjutsu in order to get revenge on the warriors. There, she meets Kamiizumi's apprentice Bungorou Hikita, who starts to teach her the art of the sword with the shinai that Kamiizumi has just invented...

(Source: Translated from Wikipedia.jp)
Commentaires (3)
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Yuki no Touge, Tsurugi no Mai review
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WuxianXiaozu13
Apr 06, 2021
I'm a sucker for all things related to the samurai, but this manga left me with a decidedly "meh" impression.

You may have read that the samurai came to an end in the Satsuma Rebellion of 1877, but in truth they many 'deaths' and 'rebirths' before that. The samurai class served many different roles throughout Japanese history, ranging from tax collectors, to bureaucrats, to soldiers, to military aristocrats. These two stories deal with samurai caught in the culture shift as the Sengoku period became the Edo period.

The first 'Snow Ridge' is the more interesting of the two. It deals with a clan forced to relocate and build a new castle after losing the Battle of Sekigahara. The debate over the castle's location turns into an internal political struggle divided on generational lines. The older samurai raised in an age of constant warfare want to build the castle in a highly defensible but remote and impoverished location, while the younger samurai with more skill as civilian administrators than soldiers want to put it where there will be the most political and economic benefit. There is some interesting political maneuvering and a decent conclusion.

The second story is rather generic samurai fare. A teenage girl seeks revenge against the samurai thugs who raped her and murdered her family, so she finds a famous swordsmanship instructor to teach her how to fight. The instructor uses a new type of training sword that will become important to the sport of kendo, which allows her to train effectively despite her more fragile body. This story is supposed to symbolize how samurai battlefield skills began to transition to ritualized martial arts, but it ends up being a mediocre samurai story anyone who's seen a few Kurosawa movies could have written.

The art for both of these stories is decent but nothing special, and the characters are basic archetypes. It's an OK read for fans of samurai stories.