Emily sent me pictures of Hip Parade toys. They are figurines shaped like women’s bodies from the waist to just above the knees. There are various types and colors. They’re only $8!
This one is called “Active Girls” and for some reason says “cat” and has a picture of a cat on the butt. I don’t know what the connection between a cat and being active is.
Found here.
Found here.
This one is the “trading torso.” You can trade with others to collect all four!
Found here.
Thanks, Em! Sort of.
Comments 12
Otter Matic — June 16, 2008
What are these for? I am so confused. Are they just plastic collectible butts? This is so problematic on so many levels.
Gwen Sharp, PhD — June 16, 2008
I'm pretty sure they're just collectible plastic butts.
Yep.
pharmacopaeia — June 17, 2008
Where are the men's butts! :D
“Hip Parade” pelvis dolls at Hoyden About Town — June 17, 2008
[...] Sociological Images and [...]
Tim — June 17, 2008
Cat is slang for vagina and also reminds one of how catty females are. Active as in sexually active. Interesting collection, I wonder if there are already feet ones. If there are any of men butts they'd be in a gay store.
73man — June 17, 2008
Perhaps cat meaning pussy cat? Anyone, anyone?
Plastic hip collectors? Now that's odd!
Village Idiot — June 17, 2008
From the links where these are sold: Didn't think we forgot about all you lonely Otaku out there did you?
From Wikipedia: Otaku (おたく or オタク?) is a Japanese term used to refer to people with obsessive interests, particularly anime and manga.
And
The term was popularized in the English speaking world in William Gibson's 1996 novel Idoru, which has several references to otaku. In particular, the term was defined as 'pathological-techno-fetishist-with-social-deficit'.
Sounds about right.
Village Idiot — June 17, 2008
Oh, and another example of a pathological techno fetish w/ a social deficit might be found here:
http://www.huntingforbambi.com/
Not sure if that one has been posted before. You could apparently really buy the videos (not any more), but they were staged and people did raise genuine hell when it first appeared. Snopes covers the history and timeline of it.
Elena — June 17, 2008
There is a big market for collectible figures in otaku circles. Some of it has dribbled down to the West in form of designer vinyl toys like the Kubricks.
There are tens of thousands of figure series in Japan. Most of them are normal depictions of the characters of manga, anime and videogames, or just plainly cute: Bleach, Rozen Maiden, Monster Hunter Pig, Dragon Quest Monsters.
Some play to otaku fetishes in a titillatingly cute way, like collections of girls in maid uniforms or anthropomorphic personifications of machinery: Costume Party Maid Cafe, Konami Mecha Musume.
And some are more definitely in the erotic genre, even more than the disincarnated torsos from the above post. Heisei Democracy is a weblog that features this last kind of fanservicey figures quite often.
While in Japan people of all ages and sexes are consumers of manga and anime (and there are quite innocent figure collections of pretty much every series you will have heard of, from Sailor Moon to Naruto -- even figures of the high school Naruto alternate universe characters featured in one of the credits of the anime series), the otaku fringe, and specially the figure-obsessed otaku, are still disproportionally male and hormonally-overloaded, so a significant section of the figure market caters to this niche population. Hence the erotic themes.
Elena — June 17, 2008
Oh, and about the "cat" thing: Cats in Japan are viewed as adorable balls of fur, and it is quite common for "mischievous but cute" female characters to have some cat-like characteristics, from doing the :3 (look sideways to see the emoticon) smile (like, um, this) to full-fledged catgirl/ kemonomimi status.
Gwen Sharp, PhD — June 21, 2008
We do have a post about Hunting for Bambi:
http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2008/01/10/hunting-for-bambi-that-is-women/
WOMEN AS ITEMS FOR CONSPICUOUS CONSUMPTION » Sociological Images — November 26, 2009
[...] examples of women’s objectification: women as a precious belonging, collectibles, urinals, a soap dispenser, a bike (eh em, “bitchcruiser”), video game, and a pencil [...]