I’ve read the Freezing manga. The manga was never licensed in America however, so that meant I had to read the scans. There’s generally a moral viewpoint when it comes to scans, but mine is simple: If it’s not licensed, it’s fair game. If it is licensed, you either: Drop reading the title and wait ... Read more
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JacketFlap tags: Freezing, Manga Article, Freezing Manga, Freezing Seven Seas Omnibus, Literally being a goofball, please support the official release with a cherry on top, Add a tag

Blog: Whateverings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children, Links, kids, winter, tree, comics, snow, humor, cartoon, General Illustration, cold, Samples, squirrel, paula becker, freezing, whimsical, temperature, Cartoons & Comics, frozen, thermometer, paulajbecker, Add a tag
A slight re-working of an old illustration. I dropped the temperature on the thermometer and added his breath-cloud. Or whatever that’s called.
Don’t go out, little squirrel!

Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Health, History, UK, smith, beauty, green, A-Featured, virginia, Leisure, purity, clean, dirt, ecology, hot, springs, asceticism, skincare, virginity, baths, Add a tag
Yesterday you read an extract from Virginia Smith’s new book Clean: A History of Personal Hygiene and Purity. For today’s post she has kindly agreed to answer a few questions about her work.
OUP: How did you come to write a book on personal hygiene? (more…)

Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I’m happy to confess here and now that I’m a girl who likes her mascara, and it’s a rare day that I appear in public without it. So, imagine my delight when our new book Clean came along. In it the author, Virginia Smith, explores the development of our obsession with personal hygiene, cosmetics, grooming, and purity. In the first of three posts, I’m happy to present the below short extract from the first chapter of the book.
Dirt is only matter out-of-place and is neither ‘good’ nor ‘bad’. Nature does not care what we think, or how we respond, to matter in all its forms. But as a species we do care, very deeply, about our own survival. A dense mass of human history clusters around the belief that dirt is ‘bad’, and that dirt-removal (cleansing) is always ‘good’. The old Anglo-Saxon word ‘clean’ was used in a wide variety of situations: it was often blatantly human-centred or self-serving in a way we might call ‘moral’; but it was also used more objectively as a technical term, to measure or judge material things relative to other things. It was thoroughly comprehensive, and unquestioned.
Preceding all human cultural history however – certainly before any human history of personal hygiene – were billions of years of wholly a-moral species development. The exact date one enters this endless time-line is almost irrelevant; what we are really looking for are the time-spans or periods when things speed up, which in the case of homo sapiens was somewhere between c.100,000-25,0000 BCE, followed by another burst of development after c.5000 BCE. Throughout this long period of animal species development, all of our persistent, over-riding, and highly demanding bio-physical needs were evolving and adapting, and providing the basic infrastructure for the later, very human-centred, psychology, technology and sociology of cleanliness.
It is difficult not to use ancient language when describing the egotistical processes of human physiology – routinely described as the ‘fight’ for life – and in particular, our endless battle against poisonous dirt. Much of this battle is carried out below the level of consciousness. Most of the time our old animal bodies are in a constant state of defence and renewal, but we feel or know nothing about it; and the processes are virtually unstoppable. We can no more stop evacuating than we can stop eating or breathing – stale breath, of course, is also an expellation of waste matter. Ancient scientists were strongly focussed on the detailed technology of these supposedly poisonous bodily ‘evacuations’; and modern science also uses similarly careful technical terminology when describing bodily ‘variation’, ‘elimination’, ‘toxicity’ or ‘waste products’. In either language, old or new, inner (and outer) bodily ‘cleansing’ is ultimately connected to the more profound principle of ‘wholesomeness’ within the general system of homeostasis that balances and sustains all bodily functions.
Further extracts from other chapters of Clean can be found on Virginia Smith’s website.
I’m really surprised to learn that Freezing was done by the same duo that did Kurokami. I’ve only seen the anime for Freezing (And season 1 at that) but man… Its such a different show. I really loved Kurokami for a long while, and read a fair bit of it back in the day, so I was thinking about actually giving the Freezing manga a chance. The Kurokami anime was a far cry from the manga afterall.
Having said that, based on your review, I think I’ll take a look at it. Nudity and shocking stuff doesn’t bother me, so given its at least as good as Kurokami, I’m bound to like it.
After this review I am going to have to check it out.
Welp, I guess we’ll see, but I don’t think Kurokami and Freezing are the same. I say that knowing I haven’t watched or read Kurokami…but hey, sure, can always have some other people check Freezing out against their better wishes!!!
Please do RJames! And uh, come back again when I check out the omnibus version in September or October haha