Interest of the translation: Brazilian writer & journalist. a.k.a. Mário Filho. Maracana-stadium in Rio officially named after him. No article yet except in pt and nl
Interest of the translation: Media personality; he's of interest because of his mention in the Nobel Prize for Literature article, which makes me curious about him
Interest of the translation: Appears to be a historically notable Romanian gynecologist. The article on the Romanian Wikipedia appears to be a lot more developed than what I've been able to find out about Aburel from English-only sources.
Comment: The article in Czech is not sourced/referenced, and is written informally, and potentially subjectively. Therefore, the English version must be properly proofread, edited, and sourced.--Puchiko17:56, 24 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Interest of the translation: This article was originally requested on Wikipedia:List of encyclopedia topics (01). However, there is little information available in English.
Comment: I am interested only in sections 3.1 (first stage), 3.2 (spread and differentiation), and 3.3 (development). At present I have two different accounts of the origin of lolicon manga (and later, games, videos,etc.), which is the primary topic of the English article. One version by Wikipedia editor Kasuga has been incorporated into the article and seems to parallel earlier parts of the Japanese entry (3.1). You can see his version in the entry under "Origin." The other, from Sharon Kinsella, is summarized in my proposed new section at the end of the "Talk" page. There seem to be discrepancies between the two regarding the origins of the genre--was it drawn first by women and then taken over by men, or did it originate with men? It may be that both are true, and the current genre evolved from both sides. I hope that a translation from the Japanese Wikipedia will answer some of these questions. Here's a link to the relevant discussion on the Lolicon Talk page: Talk:Lolicon#Proposal. Thank you.