Komi Can't Communicate

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Komi Can't Communicate
File:Cover Art Komi-san wa, Komyushou desu Vol 1.jpg
Cover of the first manga volume featuring Komi and Tadano
古見さんは、コミュ症です。
(Komi-san wa, Komyushou desu.)
Genre
Manga
Written by Tomohito Oda
Published by Shogakukan
English publisher
Demographic Shōnen
Imprint Shōnen Sunday Comics
Magazine Weekly Shōnen Sunday
Original run May 18, 2016 – present
Volumes 18 (List of volumes)
Anime and Manga portal

Komi Can't Communicate (Japanese: 古見さんは、コミュ症です。 Hepburn: Komi-san wa, Komyushou desu.?) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tomohito Oda. It has been serialized in Shogakukan's Weekly Shōnen Sunday since May 2016.

The series has been licensed for English-language release in North America by Viz Media, with the first volume being published in June 2019.

Plot

On her first day attending the elite Itan Private High School, the main setting of the story, Shouko Komi immediately receives an overwhelming surge in popularity due to the unprecedented, stoic beauty and refined elegance her classmates perceive her to possess. However, only Hitohito Tadano, an exceedingly average schoolboy assigned to the seat next to hers, is able to have the opportunity to discover that, behind her bishōjo appearance, Komi has serious issues in communicating with others. Tadano sets out to help Komi on her quest to find 100 friends.[4]

Characters

Shouko Komi (古見 硝子 Komi Shōko?)
An absolute beauty to anyone, Shouko Komi in reality suffers from extreme social anxiety and communication problems, making her largely unable to talk to others. However, her attractiveness and stoic appearance (which in itself results from her anxiety) is perceived as refined class, making her highly popular while preventing people from actually getting to know her. Komi's first conversation with Tadano is over a blackboard, and she uses a notebook to convey her feelings through writing. Despite this, she is still capable of verbal conversation over a cell phone. Her dream is to overcome her communication problems and make 100 friends.[4]
Hitohito Tadano (只野 仁人 Tadano Hitohito?)
Sitting next to Komi, Hitohito Tadano is, as implied in the manga, an "average" schoolboy in every possible way. Discovering Komi's communication problems by inadvertently becoming the last students remaining in the classroom, he befriends Komi and, over a blackboard, promises to help Komi to accomplish her dream of having 100 friends, with him being the first. As the manga progresses, Tadano gradually uncovers Komi's issues and gets to know more of her personality, while ultimately being in denial of his slowly-progressing romantic feelings for her. His name is a wordgame of "Tada no Hitohito" (ただの人人 lit. "Only a guy."?).[4]
Rumiko Manbagi (万場木 留美子 Manbagi Rumiko?)
Rumiko Manbagi is a gyaru who joins Tadano and Komi's class in their second year of high school. She initially presented herself with an excessive amount of make-up, scaring people off and causing her to become increasingly lonely - even suffering ill physical health because of it. Tadano and Komi befriend her and help her overcome her loneliness;from then on, Rumiko considers herself their best friend. She eventually drops the make-up entirely, as well. Similarly to Komi, Rumiko is described as a 'wallflower' by her friends. Her affection towards Tadano also grows to the point where, torn between it and her friendship with Komi, she offers to step aside for Komi's sake;Komi refuses to allow such a course of action, reasoning that she cannot allow her friend to sacrifice her happiness for her own sake.
Najimi Osana (長名 なじみ Osana Najimi?)
A character with an ambiguous gender, Najimi Osana has been friends with Tadano since middle school. Long knowing them as a boy, it is to the latter's surprise that the former now dresses in a girls' uniform, albeit with a boy's tie, as they both advanced to the Itan High School. Najimi's gender is never confirmed, and they are frequently referred to with gendered pronouns, although it is implied that Najimi is genderless. Najimi regularly switches from saying they're a boy or a girl and laughing that anyone ever thought otherwise, though Tadano connects this more with what he describes as pathological dishonesty. In the manga's setting, they are the "ultimate" childhood friend, as everyone in the school has known them since childhood, due to their family's frequent moving during their childhood. Najimi is depicted as having immense capability in conversing and befriending others as a result of their childhood moving, but was hampered when introduced to Komi by Tadano, as their unsuccessful childhood attempt to befriend Komi left them with psychological trauma. Their name is a wordgame of "Osananajimi" (幼馴染 lit. "Childhood Friend"?).[4]

Publication

Komi Can't Communicate is written and illustrated by Tomohito Oda. The series was first published in Shogakukan's Weekly Shōnen Sunday as a one-shot chapter on September 16, 2015,[5][6] while the regular series started on May 18, 2016 in the same magazine.[7] Shogakukan has compiled its chapters into individual tankōbon volumes. The first volume was published on September 16, 2016.[8] As of September 18, 2020, eighteen volumes have been published.[9]

In November 2018, during their panel at Anime NYC, Viz Media announced that they have licensed the manga.[10] The first English-language volume was released on June 11, 2019.[11]

The manga has been licensed in Taiwan by Chingwin Publishing Group,[12], in Indonesia by Elex Media Komputindo,[13] in Germany by Tokyopop,[14] and in Italy by J-Pop.[15]

Volume list

No. Japanese release date Japanese ISBN English release date English ISBN
01 September 16, 2016[16] ISBN 978-4-09-127343-7 June 11, 2019[11] ISBN 978-1-9747-0712-6
02 December 16, 2016[17] ISBN 978-4-09-127426-7 August 13, 2019[18] ISBN 978-1-9747-0713-3
03 March 17, 2017[19] ISBN 978-4-09-127509-7 October 8, 2019[20] ISBN 978-1-9747-0714-0
04 June 16, 2017[21] ISBN 978-4-09-127575-2 December 10, 2019[22] ISBN 978-1-9747-0715-7
05 July 18, 2017[23] ISBN 978-4-09-127664-3 February 11, 2020[24] ISBN 978-1-9747-0716-4
06 October 18, 2017[25] ISBN 978-4-09-127856-2 April 14, 2020[26] ISBN 978-1-9747-0717-1
07 December 18, 2017[27] ISBN 978-4-09-127885-2 June 9, 2020[28] ISBN 978-1-9747-0718-8
08 March 16, 2018[29] ISBN 978-4-09-128091-6 August 11, 2020[30] ISBN 978-1-9747-0719-5
09 June 18, 2018[31] ISBN 978-4-09-128254-5 October 13, 2020[32] ISBN 978-1-9747-1740-8
10 September 18, 2018[33] ISBN 978-4-09-128390-0 December 8, 2020[34] ISBN 978-1-9747-1741-5
11 December 18, 2018[35] ISBN 978-4-09-128590-4 February 09, 2021[36] ISBN 978-1-9747-1882-5
12 March 18, 2019[37] ISBN 978-4-09-128802-8 April 13, 2021[38] ISBN 978-1-9747-1884-9
13 June 18, 2019[39] ISBN 978-4-09-129166-0
14 August 16, 2019[40] ISBN 978-4-09-129329-9
15 November 18, 2019[41] ISBN 978-4-09-129441-8
16 February 18, 2020[42] ISBN 978-4-09-129555-2
17 May 18, 2020[43] ISBN 978-4-09-850072-7
18 September 18, 2020[9] ISBN 978-4-09-850178-6

Reception

As of September 2018, the first ten tankōbon volumes had over 2 million copies in circulation.[44]

The series ranked first in a poll conducted by AnimeJapan of "Most Wanted Anime Adaptation".[45]

In a review of the first volume from Anime News Network, Rebecca Silverman called the series "a nice little story with humor and a distinct lack of cruelty that doesn't break any new barriers but is definitely fun to read." Faye Hopper considered that it is hard to tell if the humor of the series lies in Komi's "seemingly outlandish, absurd behavior" or if it is a "legitimate depiction of anxiety that we laugh at because we relate." Hopper also called the character of Najimi a "transphobic punchline", criticizing the jokes about their gender fluidity, calling them "extremely tasteless" and that they "undermines the book's message by making light of an already marginalized community." Nevertheless, Hopper stated that the series "succeeds in spite of a potentially noxious premise", pointing out that the other characters are "just as dysfunctional as the eponymous Komi, creating a solid base of compassion and doing a good job not casting her as a weird social outlier."[46]

References

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External links