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The Origin Stories of 10 Cool Cosplay Terms

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smithers456

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PostPosted: Wed Oct 25, 2023 1:06 pm
The following list is something I found online. Most of the terms I already know about. I like how Angela Tung put together a list of common convention terms. The one term I didn't know is called Con-Plague. It was the reason that I looked up the list. After reading the description I realized that they named something I already knew about. Think about it. Go Non-Stop for a three day con, don't eat or drink much. Then get sick afterwards. Glomping is a term I'm familiar with. I would see people at cons holding signs that say Hugs For Free. I'm sure that activity went down during Covid. I've seen cons overseas online where Glomping is coming back. Keep in mind that the list below is the opinion of the Author Angela Tung and not of myself or the Guild.

Feel free to post reactions to the list on this thread.  
PostPosted: Wed Oct 25, 2023 1:07 pm
The Origin Stories of 10 Cool Cosplay Terms
By Angela Tung | Oct 7, 2015
https://www.mentalfloss.com/

It’s that time of year again when fanboys and girls from around the world transform into superheroes, aliens, or maybe just George Lucas. That’s right: It’s New York Comic Con.

Cosplay and convention culture can trace their roots back to at least the 1970s, when in the U.S. fans began to appear at science fiction conventions dressed as Starfleet commanders, Luke Skywalker, and the like, and in Japan, college students attended manga and anime festivals donned in full character regalia.

Such a colorful culture has also given rise to colorful terminology. You can find 10 right here to introduce you to the world of cosplay.

1. MANGA
The manga style of comics emerged from post-World War II Japan with Ozama Tezuka’s Astro Boy. The genre is drawn in a “meticulously detailed style,” according to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED), and is often associated with a science fiction or fantasy theme.

While the term first appeared in English in 1951, manga in Japanese is from 1799 or earlier. Translated as “involuntary pictures,” manga was coined in 1812 by artist Katsushika Hokusai to describe a free-flowing, quirky style.

2. ANIME
While Japanese animation has existed since as far back as 1917, anime as we know it today arose in the 1970s. This term for what's basically the animated version of manga first appeared in English in 1985 and might be based on the French animé, animated or lively. Before the 1970s, Japanese animation was known as manga eiga, or “TV manga.”

3. COSPLAY
Cosplay, a blend of costume and play, comes from the Japanese kosupure, itself a Japanification of costume play, which originated in 19th century English to refer to a costume drama. Kosupure was coined by Nobuyuki Takahashi, who would later become a film editor on such J-horror classics as Ringu and Ju-On: The Grudge. But back in 1983, he was writing about fans who attended conventions dressed as their favorite manga and anime characters. The term kasou, a Japanification of costume, already existed, but didn’t capture the right spirit of cosplay, according to Kotaku, while a translation of the English masquerade seemed too old-fashioned to Takahashi. Hence, kosupure was born.

4. LAYER
Layer is Japanese slang for cosplayer. Layer Support is a cleaning service specifically for cosplay costumes.

5. FURRY
A furry is a fan of human-like animal characters and people dressed as such characters. While the OED’s earliest citation is from 1989, the furry phenomenon probably began in the early 1980s, if not sooner.

6. OTAKU
A Japanese loan word, otaku refers to someone extremely knowledgeable about a hobby or subculture, and who might be, at least according to the OED, skilled in "computer technology" and unskilled in interpersonal interaction. In other words, a nerd. Otaku seems to have suffered a sort of reverse-reappropriation, at least in Japan. While in English, geek and nerd are traditionally pejorative terms that have gained a degree of coolness, otaku began in the early 1980s as an "insider" term—a way that anime and manga fans addressed each other, then any member of the subculture. Otaku only became an insult in the hands of the media commenting on such a subculture. Meanwhile, outside Japan, otaku has positive connotations, denoting someone who's an expert or aficionado. Otaku translates literally from the Japanese as “your house” (in other words, people who are otaku don’t leave the house), and cosplay otaku is thought of as a subset.

7. CHIBI
Chibi, which translates from Japanese as “runt,” is a cute kid version of an anime character. Chibi and super-deformed are sometimes used interchangeably. However, while all chibis are super-deformed, not all super-deformed are chibis. Chibis are always child-like, but super-deformed describes a character drawn in any exaggerated or deformed way. Both are used in anime as parody or slapstick. For instance, a character may suddenly become chibi when behaving immaturely.

8. POST-CON DEPRESSION (PCD)
Returning to the humdrum of everyday life from a place where one might be treated like a rock star can be a huge downer. Hence, post-con depression, or PCD, the blues some cosplayers feel after attending a convention.

9. CON-PLAGUE
Post-convention, you might also endure the con-plague, sometimes called the con crud, an illness one catches after several days of being in close quarters with throngs of people, not eating well, and not getting enough sleep. There’s much advice about how to avoid the con-plague, which are basically the same tactics to avoid catching a cold or the flu.

10. GLOMPING
If you don't want con-plague, you might also want to eschew glomping. An aggressive tackle-hug, glomp began as an anime term but has extended to convention use. Convention etiquette seems to be against it due to the possibility of costume crushing and bodily harm. It’s unclear if glomping is innate behavior among enthusiasts or if it's in imitation of anime characters. According to TV Tropes, glomp may come from the English translation of the sound effect of the overenthusiastic embrace in some manga. A popular theory says that glomp is a backronym of "Grab, Latch On, Maintain Pressure," but more likely the word is imitative, and might be influenced by the English glom, to snatch or grab, or glamp, to grope or snatch at.  


smithers456

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angelmage99
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 29, 2023 9:12 pm
I didn't know about the Layer term. It's cool that there's a shorten form.

I'm also working on a dictionary for one of my 101 threads in the future. I'll have to take some things from this as they're posted.  
PostPosted: Mon Oct 30, 2023 1:27 am
Here is another list of terms that I found from another source. Some of the terms are the same as the list above.

Source: https://ourcommunitynow.com/

Cosplay Terms and Lingo:

1. Base
Something you buy and heavily mod. (Find the definition for "mod" below.)

2, Civvies
Civilian clothes (non-cosplay clothing).

3. Con Plague
Post-convention, you might also endure the con plague, an illness one catches after several days of being in close quarters with people, not eating well, not drinking enough water, and not getting enough sleep.

4. Cosplay
"Costume Play"; the practice of dressing up as a character from a movie, book, video game, or other types of fandom.

5. Cosplay Contest
A competition that shows off what you're wearing. You get paid if you win based on one of the four divisions. (Find the definitions for "The Four Levels," "Novice," "Journeyman," "Master," and "Professional" below.)

6. Crossplay
Known as the action of cosplaying characters from the opposite sex, it applies to both genders.

7. Crossover/Mashup
Combination of two fandoms to create a new character.

8. Furry
A furry is a fan of human-like animal characters and people dressed as such characters.

9. GenderBend
Change the gender of a character to suit your preferences or your own gender. In this case, you will adapt the features of the character to the opposite sex, and you will be making a genderbend cosplay.

10. Journeyman
If you won in Novice for a bigger con, you would compete in Journeyman. (Find the definition for "Novice" below.)

11. LARP (Live-Action Role Play)
A type of interactive role-playing game in which the participants portray characters through physical action, often in costume and with props.

12. Master
Once you win Journeyman, you go to Master. (Find the definition for "Journeyman" above.)

13. Masquerade
A competition where you go up in cosplay and do a skit related to what you are wearing, then you're judged on your performance and how you look.

14. Mod
Take whatever piece you have—a jacket, dress, whatever—and rework it, making it more accurate to the costume you're trying to do.

15. Novice
Entry-level in a cosplay contest.

16. OC (Original Characters)
Create a completely new character from scratch, not part of a specific fandom.

17. PCD (Post-Con Depression)
The blues some cosplayers feel after attending a convention.

18. Professional
If you're a professional costume designer or makeup artist, or FX person, you have to compete in Professional.

19. Screen-Accurate
Same brand, same item worn on a show, movie, game, etc.

20. Screen-Worn
The exact article of clothing the actor wore on screen.

21. The Four Levels
Divisions in a cosplay contest: Novice, Journeyman, Master, or Professional.  


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