Find » Travel » The Role of the Geisha in Japanese ...

The Role of the Geisha in Japanese Culture

By Cristina Olvera, published Feb 06, 2006
Published Content: 135  Total Views: 276,928  Favorited By: 15 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 3.1 of 5
In the Edo Period (1600-1868) the Tayu arose. They were Japanese Courtesans who entertained with arts of dance, music, poetry and calligraphy, and an educated wit. Due to isolation within closed districts the Tayu became highly ritualized and more removed from changing society. Their clients began to dwindle. It wasn't long before the rise of the Geisha ended the era of the Tayu. The popularity of the Geisha grew rapidly and eventually completely depleted the number of Tayu. The last recorded Tayu was in 1761.

WHAT IS A GEISHA?

Geisha means "artist" in Japanese. Geisha are professional hostesses who entertain guests by performing various arts in tea houses called O-chaya. Throughout their careers Geisha are trained and continue to study and perfect skills such as Japanese ancient dance, singing, playing instruments such as Shamisen, flower arrangement, wearing kimono, tea ceremony, calligraphy, conversation, alcohol serving manners and more.

The Geisha tradition evolved from the taikomochi or hokan, similar to court jesters. The first Geisha were all male. When women began to take the role of Geisha they were known as onna Geisha (women artist). Today Geisha are all female, besides the Taikomochi. Taikomochi are becoming extremely rare. There are only three still registered in Japan.

To be successful a Geisha must demonstrate beauty, grace, artistic talent, charm and impeccable etiquette and refinement. Guest with a long time connection to the tea houses are the only ones allowed. It is rare for the tea houses to take on new clients without an introduction. The Geisha profession is very expensive. A Geisha party can easily cost thousands of US dollars.

THE ROLE OF A GEISHA?

Takeaways
  • Geisha can still be found living in traditional houses called okiya in areas called hanamachi.
  • The first Geisha appeared in the Tokugawa period (1600-1868) in Japan.
  • The Geisha profession is very expensive.
Did You Know?
Geisha are not prostitutes, but they do maintain many different relationships with men.
Comments
Comments 1 - 7 of 7
 
 
im in year 11 at school and i choose japan for my art GCSE question and chose to go for the fashion aspect and role of the geisha.. this is really helpful. everything i needed to know. thankyou very much. - VIcky x

Posted on 04/09/2008 at 11:04:51 AM

 
I am from Argentina and am writing an essay about the importance of geisha in society, your article helps me a lot. thankss xoxo

Posted on 04/01/2008 at 1:04:40 PM

 
I am from Argentina and am writing an essay about the importance of geisha in society, your article helps me a lot. thankss xoxo

Posted on 04/01/2008 at 1:04:27 PM

 
Actually it was the era of the oiran, tayu were the top class of oirans. I find your article too brief.

Posted on 11/12/2007 at 11:11:00 AM

 
I love Geishas. there so pretty and smart and cool this article really helped me with my assignment on Japans culture.

Posted on 10/16/2007 at 11:10:00 AM

 
Enjoyed your Geisha article. I didn't realize that men were Geisha at first. All I knew about them was from movies. :)

Posted on 05/18/2007 at 10:05:00 PM

 
i loved your article on geisha. it helped me on one of my essays. thank-you so much!

Posted on 03/05/2007 at 6:03:00 PM

Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Comments 1 - 7 of 7
 
Advertisment