Dogma CORE, 2006–, is a Japanese production in the bakushi / kinbaku ecosystem.
2006–
Era: 2000s
Narrow Japanese SM / AV production label launched in 2006 from the Dogma / TOHJIRO context and co-founded with Naka Akira. Modeled here as a bounded Naka + TOHJIRO production-infrastructure bridge, not as a broad Dogma filmography hub. Loft Plus One's March 2006 launch event presents Dogma CORE as TOHJIRO's SM label and lists a special live rope / SM segment by Naka Akira and TOHJIRO; Nawapedia records both Naka and TOHJIRO as co-founders of the label.
An interactive genealogy of bakushi and kinbaku —
the Japanese rope traditions that grew from Edo-period hojōjutsu
through twentieth-century SM magazines into today's global
shibari scene.
The map currently holds 320 people,
238 studios, events, works and context nodes
and 1394 documented connections across
9 eras. Each record is sourced
from public material — Nawapedia, ShibariStudy, festival
rosters, interviews, archived studio pages — and curated by a
single researcher.
This is a beta version: the structure, sources
and interface are public enough to explore, but the map is still
being expanded and corrected.
How to read it
Vertical position is time: the 1800s at the
top, the 2020s at the bottom. Cards are coloured by
school or lineage; lines between them carry
the relationship type — solid amber for direct apprenticeship
(deshi), dashed for influence or peer study, thinner
coloured lines for venues, magazines, or productions. Click a
card to open its bio, antecedents and descendants. Filters in
the top bar narrow by era, entity type, or relationship.
Caveats
Inclusion is selective: a person or studio appears only when
there's enough public evidence to anchor them meaningfully.
Missing birth years are deliberate — many practitioners don't
publicise them. Errors and gaps will exist; corrections
welcome at pussynawa@proton.me.