Caveat: Princess Mafia

Back in 2008 I had a middle-school class called TP1.  By sheer distributional accident, it was all girls.  And they were not the "good student" type of girls – they were all rebellious, obnoxious, and often lazy as all hell.  I tried some various gimmicks to try to keep them engaged, but ultimately the only thing that ever worked was to go "off script" and just talk about stuff.  This suits me fine, actually – I think that's the absolute BEST way to learn a language, talking about things that are interesting to one.  But it raised a lot of ire with my bosses because I wasn't making progress in the text.

[broken link! FIXME] P1040945  Anyway, way back then, I was also reading a lot of manga (Japanese serial comic book novels), and was toying with trying to write my own.  The most progress I made was with a sort of concept of essentially recreating this experience of this clueless, fuddy-duddy, middle-aged, American guy trying to teach English to a bunch of trendy but disinterested Korean middle-schoolers, much more fascinated by the cute guy in the next class and their cell phones and their own reflections in the windows than in learning how to take the TOEFL. 

I had named the class the "Princess Mafia," which the girls alleged was offensive to them, but which they nevertheless seemed to adopt as a sort of badge of honor, and would bandy it about.  And that became the working title of my little manga.

I did some plotting and framing on it, but my artistic skills are unpracticed.  And then it sort of faded from my mind, as a project.  Recently, however, I ran across some pages of character studies I'd made.  I wonder… it still seems to have some potential.  At right:  Hannah.

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