Seinen

Chi. — About the Movement of the Earth

The story of those who risked their lives for the forbidden knowledge of heliocentrism.

🔍 Cultural Analysis🏛️ 文化背景
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Cultural Analysis

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No Battles, No Romance, No Single Protagonist — How "Chi." Broke Every Rule of Manga Success
"Chi. - About the Movement of the Earth" ignored the standard "Friendship, Effort, Victory" formula of Shonen manga. How did a story about medieval scholars dying for a theory sell over 3 million copies?
Why Japanese People are Afraid of "Religion" — The Real-Life Incidents Behind the Terror in "Chi."
The fear of institutional power in "Chi." resonates deeply in Japan. This isn't just about medieval history; it’s tied to modern traumas like the 1995 Sarin gas attack that shaped the Japanese view of religion as something inherently "dangerous."
Is the Inquisition in "Chi." Over-the-Top? — Why "Historical Lies" Made the Story Feel True
The blood-soaked Inquisition in "Chi." is terrifying, but history tells us Galileo wasn't executed and the Church even supported science. Why did the author choose to exaggerate? Let's explore the strategic "lies" that made this story a masterpiece.
『チ。』考察:無宗教の日本人がなぜ「地動説」に心を動かされるのか?
Japan's relaxed relationship with religion, a textbook's worth of Inquisition knowledge, and why a medieval Polish story made so many non-religious readers cry
🏛️

文化背景

2
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The Snake Was Never the Villain — Yorushika's "Hebi" and the Two Ancient Texts Behind It
A Bible story and a Tang dynasty love poem. "Hebi" (Snake) draws on both — and reading both carefully reveals something at the heart of what Chi. is really about.
"Wanting to Know What Cannot Be Known" — How Yorushika's "Aporia" Captures the Soul of Chi.
Why does an anime ending theme borrow its title from Greek philosophy? And why does that choice turn out to be exactly right.
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