That... would further reinforce the claim. Y'know, with the text/graphic gender split.
This is starting to get convoluted now. Which claim are you referring to, and how do you think a text/graphic split reinforces it? I really have no idea what you're referring to as "the claim" here.
Normally men are said to prefer visual media and women are said to prefer textual/imaginative media. Arguing for a gender split the opposite way would seem counter-intuitive.
What's your source on that? I'm having trouble finding any total numbers.
It was easy to find. I just googled "top selling light novel/manga 2015" and got ANN's lists
http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2015-11-29/top-selling-light-novels-in-japan-by-series-2015/.95914http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2015-11-29/top-selling-manga-in-japan-by-series-2015/.95913We're talking 10 million+ for the chart-topping mangas vs 1 million for the chart-topping LNs in 2015. Just on total volumes shipped, there's about a 10 size difference between the manga market and the light novel market (assuming roughly equal number of publications). But since manga are
serialized before they get actual volumes, then the manga market needs to be inflated by the circulation numbers of the manga magazines they appear in. e.g. One Piece is selling around 1.5 million copies per new volume released, but it has a further circulation of 2.5 million copies in Weekly Shonen Jump, for total circulating copies of around 4 million. Putting aside manga magazines, and only looking at publish tankobon, to be completely fair, we need to do per-volume estimates, since some novels might be sporadic, and manga can be weekly vs monthly, and vary in chapter length:
Ao Haru Ride was the top-selling shoujo manga, it's had 13 volumes in 4 years, so 3,638,637 sales in 2015 amounts to about 1.1 million copies per new volume last year. The best-selling LN (
is it wrong to to pick up girls in a dungeon) did 1.2 million sales last year, and they've had 9 volumes in 3 years, so three new volumes a year, so per-volume sales were about 1/3rd of the best selling
shoujo manga, let alone the best-selling manga in general, One Piece, which has about 9 volumes per year and sold 14 million last year, so ... about 1.5 million copies per new volume (almost 4 times the best-selling LN). But that's before factoring in that One Piece also appears in Weekly Shonen Jump, with circulation of almost 2.5 million, meaning that around 4 million
copies of any One Piece volume are actually produced - or about 10 times the best selling LNs of the year.
Meanwhile, the best-selling shoujo-type novels were Kokuhaku Yokou Renshuu and Kagerou Daze, both vocaloid spin-offs with 1 volume last year. So I'm
not sure that these could really be called representative "shoujo" series. But still, they sold in the 400K - 500K region, which is 1/2 to a 1/3rd of what the top-selling shoujo manga managed.