NMB48 21st Single Announced
No title announced yet.
Release date: 14/08.
Senbtasu:
Team N: Murase Sae, Kawakami Chihiro, Ota Yuuri, Yoshida Akari, Tanigawa Airi.
Team M: Shiroma Miru©, Shibuya Nagisa, Yasuda Momone.
Team BII: Kojima Karin, Yamamoto Ayaka, Jonishi Rei, Umeyama Cocona, Kato Yuuka, Shiotsuki Keito, Azuma Yuki, Yamamoto Mikana.
Kenkyuusei: Minami Haasa, Ota Riona.
Changes in the Senbatsu compared to the previous single:
Out: Jo Eriko (graduated), Naiki Kokoro (announced graduation), Iwata Momoka (graduated), Kawakami Rena.
New: Azuka Yuki and Ota Riona (1st Single Senbatsu).
Queentet is going to have a new song but this time they also going to have a MV.
NMB’s dance team (Kato Yuuka, Kojima Karin, Azuma Yuki, Kawakami Chihiro, Ishida Yuumi and Kawano Nanaho) is going to have a song.
NMB48 member Shiroma Miru will release her first photo book on June 19
The book will feature photos shot by Nakamura Kazutaka at Gold Coast in Australia. On the anticipated photo book, Shiroma commented, “It includes all of me from photos that even I think are good to photos of me making funny faces that will make you laugh. It would make me happy if both my fans and people who don’t know me yet take a look at it. You will not be disappointed!”
NMB48 Shiroma Miru Photobook announced video
Follow the official twitter for the book searching the username @shiroma_first
Ruth and Naomi, 1886.
Philip Hermogenes Calderon (British, 1833-1898)
Oil on canvas
This painting portrays a scene from one of the only stories in the Old Testament to focus on the strong love bond between two women, the Book of Ruth. Calderon shows Naomi returning to her native land from Moab. She is trying to dissuade her two daughters-in-law, Ruth and Orpah, both Moabite women, from accompanying her. Orpah, the figure on the right, stays behind in Moab but Ruth, the central figure, insists on going with Naomi. She is shown passionately embracing her mother-in-law and asserting her continued commitment to her. This is the moment described in the book where Ruth declares: ‘where you go I will go, and where you lodge, I will lodge; your people will be my people and your God my God’ (Ruth 1: 16). Some scholars and historians have recently noted the closeness of this speech to contemporary wedding vows.
The story of Ruth and Naomi has traditionally been treated as a story of devoted but platonic friendship between two women. More recently it has been suggested that the love between the two women might have been better described as a romance, or even sexual in nature. Trevor Dennis, Vice Dean of Chester Cathedral, for example, described the relationship between Ruth and Naomi as ‘the great love story of the bible’.* The story has become particularly important for members of the Jewish lesbian community seeking historical role models of female romantic love. This painting could be interpreted as reflecting these views. The embrace between the two women, certainly suggests an eroticism or passion that exceeds the normal bounds of friendship.













