
Right page: Why!? A woman is going to fight!? I think of myself as a female martial artist. I am someone who has dedicated my entire life to independence. I understand, let’s fight. Huh, I can’t believe it. I understand, let’s fight. Fuyu, Kyeeeeeee! Left page: I have arrived! This is not a place for luck! No, that was a remarkable display of skill. I was impressed. Please, I ask you. Please make me your disciple. I have arrived! Ah, 13.
It seems like you have dedicated quite a long time, judging by the appearance.
The author’s belief that, after all, a woman can only play house is quite evident, isn’t it?
>>3
Curry is rather more of a feminist, isn’t he?
How many times do you think I’ve addressed such topics?
>>14
The women employees in the cultural department, centered around Kuriko, are all exactly that kind of character, right?
>>14
No.
Rather, there are more instances of anti-feminist thoughts, such as the idea that one is not qualified to be a mother unless they feel pain during childbirth, or that a wife should cook for her husband.
>>3
I understand that you may not have read it, but I think it’s problematic to pretend to know and label others.
To face off without even putting on armor… that’s quite the underestimation.
It seems that the difference in skill level could be inferred from their movements.
Even though I have dedicated so many years…
I wonder if there are three levels.
Facing a naginata without armor could get you killed, right?
I also think of myself as a female hunter, that’s why I’m staying single.
Well, a master might be able to win even against a naginata.
If the opponent is a woman, her strength is likely weaker, so if the weapon is deflected by strength, she probably can’t withstand it.
I can’t believe you’re doing this sober when you might get hit in the face from a long range with a weapon.
If you have armor, you can hit without hesitation.
Without armor, I hesitate and am unsure where to strike.
It would be good to target the feet, which are hard to defend against in kendo.
She is an aunt who is a supervisor for the naginata club at a women’s university and has defeated several male kendo practitioners.
Really good at cooking.
A female martial artist who has devoted her life to the naginata and remained unmarried.
It’s sad that it’s not.
It doesn’t seem to be a strange result or anything.
Isn’t it good that I’m complimenting your magnificent skills?
Even though the opponent is a woman, having a naginata gives a considerable advantage, so he is quite a skilled old man.
>>22
Inspector Oishi’s sword master
Officer Oishi was troubled because his wife was created while he remained single, and this old woman was assigned to him as a result.
>>29
It’s smellier than I expected, isn’t it?
>>31
It’s not that I was irritated; it’s just because Inspector Oishi’s wife is a relative of my mentor, so we’ve gotten too close and I no longer hold back in my guidance.
>>31
This master is fundamentally different because he is a married man who has simply lost his wife.
To be precise, after Inspector Oishi got married, his master rented him a house at a bargain price, and he started living very close by.
After many years of living alone and feeling lonely, the master finally went on a rampage and began to give the police chief strict training.
Because it was at a level that made it impossible to sustain a newlywed life, I had to find another outlet.
The flow is to make a female warrior and her student, a female college student, the substitute disciples.
>>29
I introduced them in the form of a match since there was a perfectly suitable female warrior, and it went well.
The scariest thing about the naginata is when the long-range naginata targets the shins; even masters find it difficult to deal with.
The shin is effective in naginata techniques, but since there are no attacks to the shin in kendo, I don’t know how to defend against it either.
Though the naginata has the advantage, kendo comes out on top in inter-school competitions.
>>24
Because men have an advantage, right?
In a match between a kendo man and a naginata man, the naginata is stronger.
Is this old man possibly the strongest in the story?
>>25
Because there are psychics who can move freely through time and space, it’s not a problem at all.
Seriously.
>>25
The strongest in the story is Tommy Fukubuchou.
Because it is a generation that continues to be asked for masculinity while accepting and proclaiming criticism of anti-authoritarianism and patriarchy.
I think there are certain things that can’t be summed up in just one word, especially in scenes like martial arts.
The mob girls are plain but cute.
What!? You want me to face off against a woman with a naginata? A woman!?
I thought the naginata was a weapon used to poke with the fingertips or sweep the shins and toes, not for downward strikes…
>>32
It’s a sharp object, so you would normally swing it down.
Kendo’s threefold-level naginata is said to be three times that, but the difference between men and women cannot be bridged.
Therefore, a man’s naginata is effeminate.
>>33
In the Warring States period, saying that would get you laughed at.
>>36
I see.
It’s currently the Reiwa era.
>>39
I want to retort, but what I’m saying is incomprehensible.
It looks like Mr. Harizawa might rank high in the Delicious Rankings.
The first place is taken by a time-traveling esper.
Even after going that far, I’m still not a true female warrior…?
In the Warring States period, if it’s effective, a naginata will also be used.
As a samurai, a bow that requires more training and has a longer range was important.
There was a sense of discomfort with the appearance of the naginata, but since the opponent is using kendo, they are not wearing shin guards.
The words are too sharp.
Not a prickly word, but a thorn bush.
Are you giving up your naginata to learn kendo…?
Was that information necessary…?
His wife died a long time ago, he has no children, and being all alone, no disciples come to his timeless dojo.
I’m feeling lonely because my niece, who has been taking care of me, and one of my few apprentices got married and started their newlywed life.
It is mentioned in the story.
It sounds like a meme line, but it’s not a meme…
When talking about male naginata users, the Yagyu Renga Martial Arts Journal inevitably comes to mind, right, Anonymous?
Cut the ice cream.
Did you need a convenient female warrior?
Are you doing it by the rules of Kendo?
After all, the kusarigama is the strongest, isn’t it?
Later, there will be a scene of the master jogging happily with female martial artists and college girls!
>
I was laughing at how ridiculous this was, but once they started picking up weapons, I was like, wow.
>>57
I believed this response and watched until the end, but it was just a farce the whole time.
I hope that this nameless person lives carefully, more than others, so they won’t be deceived by scams, even if it means losing 2 minutes of their life.
Being good at cooking in the absolutely delicious world of “Oishinbo” has more of a sense of a skilled martial artist without any flaws than a cute gap.
>
The chain of the kusarigama is attached over there… No, but no matter how you think about it, that way is definitely more rational…
I consider myself an alluring female spy and remain single.
Taking Kurita and Yamaoka out of the picture, it’s enough to say that winning against Oyama shows that they depict many stories about independent women overall.
Moreover, it positively depicts traditional images of women, and it’s more about strongly characterized portrayals, so it’s neither feminist nor anti-feminist.
Midwives who are anti-painless childbirth are simply strong-willed women who have fallen into a macho mindset.
>>63
That anti-pain relief delivery ideology remains praised after all.
Even if it’s said that Kurita defeated Yūzan, in the end, I’m still a believer in Yūzan.
>>63
In other words, it means leaning more towards the middle rather than being biased towards one side.
The female martial artist may not have targeted the shins, which are not used in kendo.
I will become the wife of the man who defeated me, but at this age, it will be tough.
But the women in Oishinbo are…
They’re the kind of guys who talk a big game and push their troubles onto Yamamoto.
>>67
Men are also pushing a lot of trouble onto others, right?
Tommy and the company president.
Yamaoka treats the anti-epidural birth philosophy as a typically biased perspective.
However, after seeing someone else’s childbirth, Kurita-san was moved, and the issue became ambiguous, or rather, the focal point shifted to the fact that it was due to a skilled obstetrician.
It’s a frustrating trend that favors clumsy praise of ideas.
…Even without considering painless childbirth, that old woman doesn’t look skilled at all.
Since the first appearance, I definitely think it’s wrong to treat this explanation as something from a crazy person.
Don’t introduce me to people like that…
Huh. An oracle’s warning. It feels old-fashioned, doesn’t it? In this area, there are many children who have been helped by Nishihama. If that’s the case, isn’t that a good doctor? But you know… there are also people who say they don’t want to be treated by Nishihama.
I thought it was a character who was crazy enough to think of himself as a woman to practice naginata, but it turns out I’m the crazy one.
I see, so it’s that kind of play.
The author themselves said that this manga features a lot of funny people…
Isn’t it pretty sad that I lost using a naginata after being so dedicated?
>>75
Not considering that the other person has trained harder is also arrogant.
Why is an old woman coming out with this setting?
Can a naginata defeat a sword in a match?
I’m not very familiar with the rules of naginata, but in kendo, as long as you avoid the men, do, and kote, it won’t count as a valid strike.
The advantageous part of the reach will be considerably lost.
I mean, the fact that this person loses to a sword while using a naginata really shows they haven’t trained much…
No, this old man is an invincible monster, right?
If a naginata is aiming for your legs, it’s really an impossible game in kendo…