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in relation with [[WorkUnit:Carnages|Carnages]] | in relation with [[WorkUnit:Carnages|Carnages]] | ||
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<script> { global $wgGallerier; $wgGallerier->addGallery( array( "path" => "20170511-doujinshi-bayonetta2/" )); } </script> | <script> { global $wgGallerier; $wgGallerier->addGallery( array( "path" => "20170511-doujinshi-bayonetta2/" )); } </script> | ||
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+ | == Resources == | ||
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<references/> | <references/> |
in relation with Carnages
Dōjinshi (同人誌?, often translated as doujinshi) is the Japanese term for self-published works, usually magazines, Manga or novels. Dōjinshi are often the work of amateurs, though some professional artists participate as a way to publish material outside the regular industry. Dōjinshi are part of a wider category of dōjin including art collections, anime, hentai and games. Groups of dōjinshi artists refer to themselves as a sākuru (サークル?, circle). A number of such groups actually consist of a single artist: they are sometimes called kojin sākuru (個人サークル?, personal circles).[1]
online identity ∋ [ social ∋ [mastodon♥, twitter®, facebook®, diaspora, linkedin®]
∥ repos ∋ [github®, gitlab♥, bitbucket®, sourceforge] ∥ media ∋ [itch.io®, vimeo®, peertube♥, twitch.tv®, tumblr®] ∥ communities ∋ [godotengine♥, openprocessing, stackoverflow, threejs]]