Gonensei

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Alternatives: Synonyms: The 5th Grade
Japanese: 五年生
Author: Kio, Shimoku
Type: Manga
Volumes: 5
Chapters: 31
Status: Finished
Publish: 1998-03-06 to 2021-03-06
Serialization: Afternoon

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4.5
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Alternatives: Synonyms: The 5th Grade
Japanese: 五年生
Author: Kio, Shimoku
Type: Manga
Volumes: 5
Chapters: 31
Status: Finished
Publish: 1998-03-06 to 2021-03-06
Serialization: Afternoon
Score
4.5
2 Votes
50.00%
50.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0 Reading
0 Want to read
0 Read
Summary
Akio and Yoshino believed all there was left for them was to graduate, but life had different plans for them. Yoshino moves on while Akio stays behind, and something between them begins to change.

The story of their youth continues.

(Source: MU)
Reviews (2)
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Gonensei review
by
Verienkeli5
Apr 05, 2021
"Could there be a more prescient presentation of human self-centeredness? Yet, even as the films chart the growth of individuals, the reason for the first film holds true- there is a startling stasis to the human condition." (Dan Schneider on The Up Documentaries)

TAKE NOTE TO READ YONENSEI FIRST.

It seems strange that the manga artist of the more famous Genshiken series could have a work that allows itself to be such a pure dissection of human relationships, and yet be so completely under the radar. Not merely a commentary on relationships, but on the struggles of University life, the relevance of the Law, trouble with finding employment, and the nature of how we, as human beings, fool ourselves. In 31 chapters, Gonensei charts human psychology with such a startling depth of virtuosity and understanding, that it makes even the fabulously expansive Oyasumi Punpun look a tad underwhelming.

One of the possible reasons for this is because Kio Shimoku, as a narrative writer and character creator, is unflinchingly out of his way to eliminate any sign of melodrama whatsoever. The characters all know the rules of the game. They talk with a slight meta-knowledge of the cliches that comes into play with regards to these matters, and yet, find themselves inevitably trapped when the worse possible things bear fruit. Inio Asano loves to punctuate his works with beautiful moments of human elevation, and empathy, but, Kio is all-human all-raw all-bleeding flaws, without any relent at all.

Yet, one of the reasons this work has gone strangely under the radar, seems to be because of the strange criticism you hear in places that Kio pulled things out of nowhere to make the matters even more over-dramatic, and there's a "lack of character development". These are quite possibly the two stupidest forms of criticism that could ever come out of a person's mouth in relation to the work. The latter, especially, is based on a ridiculous notion that a work has to depict this sacred notion of Character Development. Sometimes, commentary on Stasis is just as powerful as commentary on Growth. And, anyway, people who don't see development at all must be sure as hell blind in several senses of the word.

As a person who frequently goes to sites about Rationality and Meta-Cognition, I've become increasingly aware of how one of the hardest things in the world to achieve is enough prescience to escape our own horribly self-consuming mental bias. Some people, luckily, have it so that their environment from the start ferries them all the way to their grave without much of a hitch, and others struggle and die never finding out the key. Normally by telling yourself that you did something bad, you'd think you'd get out of it... but there happens to be a strange vicious cycle that may appear where by shaming yourself after doing a bad thing, you fall into a 'shame death-spiral' that leaves you even worse simply because you become too static to act, and then your fatigue takes over, and by the time you recover, you start Tabula Rasa, and the whole thing falls again. Development is achieved with viciously acquired self-knowledge, constant testing, and gradual gradual movement towards a far and possibly unreachable goal, and that's for the people who've realized this, and are actively searching knowledge bases on how to escape it.

What about the rest of humanity? There's a dreadfully horrific moment in the Up Documentaries when a lower class interviewee, filmed at 21 years old, working in a meat packing plant, makes the claim that the job is "causing his mind to rot, and I don't think I'll stay here any further". By 28 years old, when they interviewed him again, not only is he still working at the same place, but he has a family and kids now, and so he's pretty much stuck in that stability to make a living for all of them.

A nice metaphor for the psychologies of some people is the circle of hell in Dante's Inferno representing gluttony, where the temptation is also the punishment: you cannibalized others, and you yourself are cannibalized. Eventually these people either last their whole lives being eaten and somehow make a good show of it (and they spread themselves throughout all classes, from the rich to the poor), being able to contribute to human societal development in the meantime, or they break down, and get silently ferried out. Corruption, Political Scandal, Celebrity Scandal etc... are all expanded versions of the consequence of Infernic Logic, but these are only the most publicized ones. Many people get consumed every day by their own strangling mind-structure without the notion ever coming to light.

Yet, Gonensei has achieved the amazing task of showing how two people, so much stuck in their own mental biases and flaws that they've become unable to get out of the vicious loop, actually can have a chance of a healthier and better life, towards themselves, and, also, towards others. The whole range is shown here. The Triangle of 3 that Akio gets embroiled in is a straight up depiction of Infernic-Logic: people who cannot extinguish their own monumental egoisms and psychoses and end up just raising havoc with them. Akio and Yoshino fall into the cycle as well, but, are saved from Inferno to climb up to the level of Purgatory, where they acknowledge their massive inabilities to relate to people properly, and live with what they can. For a nice chunk of Humanity, right now, this is the best they can ever hope to achieve. Eventually the naturalization of psychoses turns into Stability. (Take my word for it, as a once member of one of the most rigid, long lasting, and hierarchical institutions out there. The sights you see on the top-rank do not bode well for the progressive development of humanity. Yonensei, even has a nice quote that can link to Old-Boy systems built into long-lasting structures, when Yoshino talks with a friend about how people who first enter university get along, drink, and party until in their 3rd and 4th years when they find stabilized cliques and can't be bothered to deal with the people they dislike anymore.)

Now to sink my teeth into our main characters, the everlasting stars of the show.

Akio is what you call the archetypal slacker-type, whose most idealistic form can probably be seen in Clannad, whereas quite a number of Asano's characters can settle into the more cynical range of these types, but, in whatever of Manga and Anime I've seen, it seems that Akio is the most cynical representation that isn't a straight out 'pigsty-NEET' (e.g. Ressentiment's main character). He is, in the most honest sense of the word, meandering, and ridiculously hopeless, and yet he's also strangely very smart about it. He is the purest example of an all-talk-no-action character, that depicts the worse trappings of all of the stuff I said above about people being conscious of their own flaws, yet still finding it unbearably hard to get over them. In fact, the reasons he even bothers to move out of his empty cycles are all emotional in nature. But the greatest sleight-of-hand that Kio has played in making him, is that he has made Akio a fully empathetic character, while using that very empathy to undercut the character. When you look at Akio you immediately get attached to all the pre-conceived notions you have of the archetype, that he actually has a heart of gold, and that he actually is just an unlucky dude trying to get by, and his musings are funny and deeply relatable to anyone else who has lived through a period in their life floating around like that.

Yet, it's all a magic trick, because one of the comments that another character remarks of him is that he (paraphrased) "gets involved in all the relationships, but, always manages to come out unscathed, while everyone else is licking their own wounds" and criticizes him for playing the victim card. Most of Akio's thought processes, though relatable, are deeply tilted towards himself. Part of the problem of the relationship is how he shifts the blame of his insecurities to the other party, Yoshino, and, is meanderingly quick to get back into his own 'flow'.

But, Akio is outshined by Yoshino, who is another beast of a character in terms of complexity. In fact, the only reason Akio grows is that Yoshino outplays him in getting him to, as painfully as possible, realize his own flaws in a deeply fundamental way. Yoshino is a character who is, in the similar way that Alex Sheremet describes Woody Allen's character in Annie Hall, "smarter" than others, but more fundamentally flawed in her own biases, and her inability to untie these biases. All these culminates into one of the most intense scenes in the entire manga, where her whole psychology is developed. And yet, none of the psychological turns are really unprecedented. She had early signs of it, like the long string of 'idiot boyfriends' (indicating her interests only in relationships that serve to bolster her intellectual ego), or her control freak mentality in certain sections.

And yet, even on a level above psychology, the Law serves as a recurring motif within the work itself. The complex depiction of a relationship is linked with the complex notion of why the Law exists. It is pointed out that crime will exist despite the Law, due to individual motivations, and yet by having it written down in full, the baseline for human interaction is provided. Yoshino dances on the thin line between her belief in the idea of the Law, her profession only taken out of pragmatic comfort, and her own failures as a moral being. Within this larger context of a societal Law, which Akio is forced to live by, and desperately tries to opt out at every turn, he also has to deal with the intricate needs and desires that have to be balanced between himself and Yoshino in their flawed relationship. This 'Necessary Evil of the Law' plays out on an individual level, between two people, underlining the small fundamentals which all Crime is based on.

But, at the end of all this, one finds the ending amazingly graceful in its resolution. Neither static nor gratuitously developed. A bit of forward momentum, which is, really, the most important thing that can be gained at the end of any long and arduous struggle. Some people have the pathways lubricated entirely for them, and we must be nigh egoistic and presumptive to assume the same ways will be open to ourselves, but, with their own crosses to bear, others, slow and steadily, tread on.
Gonensei review
by
anime_manga4life15
Apr 05, 2021
Have you ever cry wanked? - Joey the Anime Man from the Trash Taste Podcast, episode 21.

To start, Yonensei and Gonensei are manga created by Shimoku Kio, who is also the creator of Genshiken. Yonensei is the (a little bit boring, if I'm being honest) first series, and Gonensei is the sequel series. You should read Yonensei before Gonensei, but don't worry, as it is a very short read.

I finished this manga a long time ago, but I held off on a review for so long that I've almost forgotten most things about this series. While it might seem bad that I procrastinated for so long, I actually did this on purpose because I personally don't want to remember this series.

I first caught wind of this manga as a recommendation from Beyond Ghibli's YouTube video titled "DEGENERATE". As with all of Beyond Ghibli's work, it is a masterpiece, and it should definitely be worth your time. In his video he mentions Yonensei/Gonensei as an early work done by the same author of Genshiken, which made the series an immediate high-priority to-read manga for me, as I love Genshiken. Not knowing much about Gonensei, I assumed it would be something similar to the wholesomeness and slice of life comedy of Genshiken.

And how I was wrong. This is the exact opposite of the wholesomeness, slice of life comedy of Genshiken.

Before I start going into specifics, I will say that I did not enjoy reading this manga. However, it kept me hooked throughout the entire series, and although I did not enjoy this manga I think that there is some standard of quality in this series. I think that this series could range anywhere from a 0 to a 10, which is why I personally gave it a perfectly average score of 3/5 (8/10 on MAL). To its credit, this manga has left enough of an imprint in my mind for me to not only write a review, but also still remember it (a bit too clearly) a few months later.

And now onto the specifics.

Is this manga a masterpiece? I don't want to say that it is a masterpiece, but it definitely has quality. Shimoku Kio is a master of creating great characters, and although I don't know if all the characters in Gonensei are likeable, I think that they are compelling and relatable (I personally have acted the exact same way as certain characters). I somehow manage to care for these characters, even if I hate their actions. The series honestly feels like sometimes the characters are just put in an illogical, horrible position, and they are left to deal with the fallout. Of course, they are young and stupid and therefore make stupid mistakes, but every action they take somehow feels real, like this story could and would play out in real life.

And that is where the genius of this series lie. The series revolves around the characters, and none of them are perfect. Early on in the series, the story reaches a climax, and the rest of the series has each character dealing with the fallout, all while aging and learning (albeit slowly) from their mistakes. There is much to be said about the ending, but that involves spoilers, and I personally don't want to go into it either.

But that is also why I hate this series. Some of the things that the characters do are stupid and irresponsible and horrible, but I can see anyone acting this way. The best words I can think to describe this series with are "frighteningly real."

So is this manga recommendable? I'm torn because I love Shimoku Kio's work and I want his work to have more attention, but for this series I do not think that I can recommend this to most people. I am someone who hates NTR and anything to do with cheating and I hated reading this manga, yet the story was so compelling that I just couldn't put it down. I had to force myself to take breaks while reading this, but during those breaks this manga was all I could think about. If you are a masochist and you somehow like NTR and other messy stories (think Scum's Wish), then maybe this is perfect for you. But even with all the criticism, I think it's important to note that the manga is genuinely well written and perfectly executed. This series could be seen as either a 0 or a 10.

There is much, much more that I had planned to talk about this series when I first finished it, but that would take too much time and I don't want to think about this series any more than I have to.

If you want to go read something that won't break your mind and heart for weeks, go read Genshiken, it is so much more worth your time.

Story: 8/10

I both hate and love the story

Art: 8/10

Nothing special, but gets the job done

Character: 10/10

great characters, even if I hate them sometimes

Enjoyment: 0/10

Did not enjoy

Overall: 8/10

An average of how well done the manga was, and how little I enjoyed it.