SHINSEKAI YORI
STATUS
COMPLETE
VOLUMES
7
RELEASE
June 9, 2014
CHAPTERS
27
DESCRIPTION
About one thousand years into the future, civilization has been retrograded and humans are living dispersed within small communities. People in this era have a psychic power called "Juryoku" which materializes things they imagine. In the absence of advanced scientific technology, people are using this power as a major source of energy.
One day, a girl called Saki, along with her friends, finds a small archive robot outside the town. It records the ancient history of humans. It tells them that Juryoku was found in the 21st century and the discovery caused a world war between psychics and non-psychics. The psychics won this war and thus their reign of terror began.
When the adults in town figure out that the children discovered this forbidden knowledge, they seal their Juryoku and exile them. Saki and the others end up in a forest where they meet a huge hairless bipedal mouse known as a "Bakenezumi" and get involved in a violent war the creatures are currently engaged in.
CAST
Saki Watanabe
Squealer
Maria Akizuki
Shun Aonuma
Satoru Asahina
Mamoru Itou
Akki
CHAPTERS
RELATED TO SHINSEKAI YORI
REVIEWS
Mangosex
90/100On par with 1984 and Brave New WorldContinue on AniListStyle
From the New World, or Shinsekai Yori, is a Dystopian/Utopian Novel that was adapted into an Anime and Manga. The Anime version is faithful to the Novel while the Manga version takes more creative liberties in "Part 2". Themes include rebellion vs conformity, coping with loss, and the performance of roles on society ie Dharma. The anime has censored sex scenes while the manga reveals a little more.
Sex Scenes
Like the novel, the anime has Straight, Yaoi and Yuri sex scenes. While the manga version lacks Yaoi sex scenes, Yuri and Straight sex scenes are drawn in greater detail. The anime has clothed sex scenes between older teens with older teens. The manga has nude sex scenes between lolis and lolis (part 1), adults and adults and one scene between an adult and a loli during part 2.
I was surprised to find a book with Loli sex scenes in a high school library but the head librarian was french and I'd venture to think that she saw more in the literary merits of the work over the sex scenes. Or the french librarian I know IRL was a pervert.Art
While the anime characters are drawn with normal proportions and conservative-ish clothing, manga characters are more liberated. The manga versions have bigger boobs and butts and more curves to the point where the manga lolis have more curves than the anime adults. Kidomaru is drawn less pointy than his anime counterpart and more like Elias Ainsworth (with muscles and flesh) from Ancient Magus Bride. This could be a good or bad thing according to personal preference.Characters
The manga introduces a bunch of side characters in "part 2" that played a lesser role, or no role, in part 1. These characters add extra comedy, melodrama and a sex scene but serve no deeper purpose to the plot. A rare example where the anime is lean but the manga has filler.
The main characters are portrayed well but differently. Saki is more submissive while Maria is more Tsundere.Parts
The novel has 2 parts subdivided into 4 chapters with 2 arcs for part 1 and 2 chapters with 1 arc for part 2. Chapters 1 and 2 can be called the loli arc with no sex scenes, chapters 3 and 4 are the older teen arc and chapters 5 and 6 are the adult arc. The manga takes interesting liberties to combine the loli arc and the older teen arc into the same arc. This includes sex scenes and death scenes that should have happened to the older teens, happening to the lolis instead.
Part 1 of the manga is condensed, perhaps for fears it may be cancelled as the anime can take its time with beautiful color aesthetics while the manga must make its mark with black and white. Part 2 has added filler, as though part 1 was too condensed and filler was needed in order to sell a full book.Conclusion
While the manga version is a great adaptation of a literary masterpiece on par with 1984 or Brave New World, there is no reason to read the manga over the novel (fanslation only) or the anime unless you want to see the sex scenes. There is a relative derve of Shinsekai Yori hentai doujins that doesn't have Squealer playing the lead role as "Ugly Bastard" so if watching the anime or reading the novel has awakened a fire inside you, check out the manga.pixeldrago
72/100An incredible story to be told!... Just not in this format.Continue on AniListLate at night around 3 am, years after I had watched the anime for Shinsekai Yori, I finally read the manga.
I'm approaching this manga as someone who considers Shinsekai Yori to be one of my favorite animes. It's plot is frankly just incomparable in many ways. The art style, though maybe not the most elaborate, is nothing to scoff over either. Having watched the anime, I was prepared for most of the twist and turns that I was about to face from the manga.
The story is set hundreds of years into the future in Japan, and there is terminology that is used to describe different abnormal conditions of psychic powers as "syndromes". That being said there is not a lot of detail on how these ideas come to be, who they originated from, why certain character designs are the way they are (not just for the people but the "animals" too.) The real value of the story is thus not necessarily in the world building, albeit still quite good, but in the nuance of the storytelling and its commentary on humanity. That commentary of course, is a very sad one, which makes every twist and turn in the story all the more impactful. Some questions discussed are: What remains at the core of humanity when evolution takes place? What determines what enables us to express the nuturing empathy that humanity prides itself for having responsibility for? Furthermore, if you are well informed with Japanese history, I think it also shows commentary on cultural and societal Japanese values that may repeat themselves into the future if we do not address them. Even though this series takes place in the future, it is not a techno-utopian story. Rather, it's definitely adopting many traditional Japanese aesthetics to its style.
For the most part it seems like the anime was true to what the manga exposed me to, however that also meant that most of the plot holes remains just the same. The universe that you are drawn into does not get much bigger, whether you are reading the manga or watching the anime. The plot of the anime DOES seem to have more storytelling than the manga though, especially in regards to discussing Maria and Mamoru. I believe this is just one of the many reasons that the anime is rated at an average of 82% compared to this manga which is rated at an average of 62 percent. Along with that sentiment, this is one of the few series where I would agree that the anime is better than the manga, and I also still stand by the fact that the anime is one of the top must watches!
Another reason may be for something that the other reviewer also mentioned: the sex scenes. As someone who is a bit sexually repulsed, I was a bit shocked that the sex scenes and relationships were so much more graphic in the manga than in the anime. When things are aired on Japanese television, it's not super surprising to see things being censored out. In comparison between the anime and manga, the sex scenes frankly just seemed to be excessive. But if you do like a little yuri fan service... please remember they're also like only 14 years old! There characters also definitely look young as well, so that will be hard to miss. Considering the original source is a novel that I have to have read, it's hard to say how much the graphicn-ess of these scenes is warranted. I would not consider it to be on the level of hentai-- just quite smutty.
The manga also has extra panels of what happens in heaven when certain main characters die, which adds a bit of a comedic effect? Seeing this side isn't necessarily bad, but it doesn't have a huge role in the plot and this is not something found in the anime at all. I guess as you read the manga, the lightheartedness is cathartic? I was not a fan.
In the end, would I really recommend this manga? No-- but only because I would prefer that you watched the anime instead. You also will not get many answers out of the manga that you get after watching the anime. If anything, the manga is a smutty refresher of the plot. With the complexity of the plot, the anime also feels much more preferable to experience the frustrations and emotions compared to the manga. Pacing feels much more intentional rather than in the manga which to me felt like a lot of skipping around, the bond you form with characters is not the same. The anime is nothing to scoff at since it was produced in A-1 pictures. The fact that the anime both started after and ended before the manga might have also impacted how the pacing of the manga occurred since they were both being released around the same time. It may have been to draw more readers to read and watch both that they included the sex scenes the way they did.
SIMILAR MANGAS YOU MAY LIKE
SCORE
- (3.15/5)
MORE INFO
Ended inJune 9, 2014
Favorited by 39 Users