Japanese Whore House

Japanese Whore House




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Japanese Whore House
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Description and history of sex work in Japan
This article needs additional citations for verification . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Prostitution in Japan" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( March 2021 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )

^ Jump up to: a b Hoffman, Michael (25 April 2007). "Japan's love affairs with sex" . The Japan Times Online . Retrieved 20 December 2017 .

^ Hongo, Jun (27 May 2008). "Law bends over backward to allow fuzoku " . japantimes.co.jp . the japan times . Retrieved 1 June 2020 .

^ Jump up to: a b Leupp 2003 , p. 48.

^ Jump up to: a b Leupp 2003 , p. 49.

^ Leupp 2003 , p. 35.

^ Hoffman, Michael (26 May 2013). "The rarely, if ever, told story of Japanese sold as slaves by Portuguese traders" . The Japan Times .

^ Leupp 2003 , p. 52.

^ In the Name of God: The Making of Global Christianity
By Edmondo F. Lupieri, James Hooten, Amanda Kunder [1]

^ Leupp 2003 , p. 50.

^ Jump up to: a b c Ditmore, Melissa Hope (2006). Encyclopedia of prostitution and sex work . Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0313329685 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Edo Pleasure Districts" . Geisha of Japan . Retrieved 21 December 2017 .

^ "Courtesans and the Licensed Pleasure Quarters in Edo Japan" . Asian Art Education . Retrieved 21 December 2017 .

^ Becker, J. E. De (2007). The nightless city : geisha and courtesan life in old Tokyo (Dover ed.). Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0486455631 .

^ Pate, Alan Scott (20 October 2016). Ningyo: The Art of the Japanese Doll . Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 978-0804847353 .

^ Stanley 2012 , p. 77.

^ Vos, Fritz (December 2014). Breuker, Remco; Penny, Benjamin (eds.). "FORGOTTEN FOIBLES: LOVE AND THE DUTCH AT DEJIMA (1641–1854)" . East Asian History . Published jointly by The Australian National University and Leiden University (39): 139–52. ISSN 1839-9010 . {{ cite journal }} : External link in |ref= ( help )

^ Prak, Maarten (22 September 2005). The Dutch Republic in the Seventeenth Century: The Golden Age . Cambridge University Press. p. 119. ISBN 9781316342480 .

^ Downer, Leslie, Women of the Pleasure Quarters: The Secret History of the Geisha , Broadway, ISBN 0-7679-0490-7 , page 97

^ Morisaki, Baishun ō koku no onnatachi.

^ Stanley 2012 , p. 193.

^ Stanley 2012 , p. 194.

^ Tiefenbrun, Susan (2010). Decoding international law: semiotics and the humanities . New York: Oxford University Press. p. 480 . ISBN 978-0195385779 .

^ 来源:人民网-国家人文历史 (10 July 2013). "日本性宽容:"南洋姐"输出数十万" . Ta Kung Pao 大公报 .

^ Fischer-Tiné, Harald (2003). " 'White women degrading themselves to the lowest depths': European networks of prostitution and colonial anxieties in British India and Ceylon ca. 1880–1914". Indian Economic and Social History Review . 40 (2): 163–190 [175–81]. doi : 10.1177/001946460304000202 . S2CID 146273713 .

^ Yuki Tanaka, Japan's Comfort Women: Sexual Slavery and Prostitution during World War II and the US Occupation , Asia's Transformations (NEW York: Routhledge, 2002)133-135.

^ Herbert Bix , Hirohito and the making of modern Japan , 2001, p. 538, citing Kinkabara Samon and Takemae Eiji, Showashi: kokumin non naka no haran to gekido no hanseiki-zohoban , 1989, p. 244.

^ Slavin, Erik (14 May 2013). "Osaka mayor: 'Wild Marines' should consider using prostitutes" . Stars and Stripes . Retrieved 19 May 2013 .

^ "Hashimoto remarks 'outrageous and offensive': U.S. State Department" . Kyodo . Japan Times . 17 May 2013 . Retrieved 19 May 2013 .

^ Velgus, Justin (9 November 2012). "Why Japanese People Are Comfortable With Nakedness" . Gaijin Pot . Retrieved 10 December 2015 . While sexuality is not encouraged in most Western religions, Japan’s native Shinto religion is more open-minded… Shinto and Buddhism, both practiced and often blended in Japanese beliefs, do not consider most forms of sexuality to be sacrilegious.

^ Kuly, Lucy (2003). "Locating Transcendence in Japanese Minzoku Geinô Yamabushi and Miko Kagura" . Erudit (in French). doi : 10.7202/007130ar . Retrieved 12 December 2017 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Buddhism and Sex" . Accesstoinsight.org. 16 June 2011 . Retrieved 3 August 2012 .

^ "The Rules for Buddhist Monks and Nuns" (PDF) . Dhammaweb.net . Retrieved 24 October 2013 .

^ "Sex and Buddhism - What Buddhism Teaches About Sex" . Buddhism.about.com . Retrieved 3 August 2012 .

^ For the name, see WWWJDIC ( link Archived 3 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine ).

^ Jump up to: a b "5: The definition of prostitution is applied to limited sex acts (e.g. Japan)" . Sexuality, Poverty and Law . Retrieved 21 September 2018 .

^ Hongo, Jun, " Law bends over backward to allow 'fuzoku' ", Japan Times , 27 May 2011, p. 3.

^ Ministry of Justice (Hōmushō), Materials Concerning Prostitution and Its Control in Japan . Tokyo: Ministry of Justice, 1957, p. 32. OCLC no. 19432229.

^ Sanders 2006 , p. 41.

^ Hartley, Ryan (Spring 2005). "The politics of dancing in Japan" (PDF) . The Newsletter (70).

^ Sanders 2006 , p. 28.

^ "The sex industry in Tokyo" . Tokyo Ezine . Archived from the original on 22 December 2017 . Retrieved 20 December 2017 .

^ McNeill, David (11 November 2003). "Running the sex trade gantlet" . Japan Times . Retrieved 20 December 2017 .

^ "来日外国人犯罪の検挙状況(平成25年)【訂正版】" (PDF) . National Police Agency. 24 October 2014. p. 44.

^ "平成30年における組織犯罪の情勢" (PDF) . National Police Agency. 3 March 2019.

^
Joan Sinclair (2006). Pink Box: Inside Japan's Sex Clubs . Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 9780810992597 . Retrieved 5 January 2009 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Japan 2018 Trafficking in Persons Report" . U.S. Department of State . Archived from the original on 10 July 2018 . Retrieved 28 July 2018 . This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain .

^ "2020 Trafficking in Persons Report: Japan" . U.S. Department of State . Retrieved 15 May 2021 .



Araki, Nobuyoshi . Tokyo Lucky Hole . Köln; New York: Taschen, 1997. ISBN 3-8228-8189-9 . 768 pages. Black and white photographs of Shinjuku sex workers, clients, and businesses taken 1983–5.
Associated Press. "Women turn to selling sexual favors in Japan" (archived copy). Taipei Times , 9 December 2002, p. 11. Accessed 11 October 2006.
Bornoff, Nicholas. Pink Samurai: Love, Marriage and Sex in Contemporary Japan . New York: Pocket Books, 1991. ISBN 0-671-74265-5 .
Clements, Steven Langhorne. Tokyo Pink Guide . Tokyo: Yenbooks, 1993. ISBN 0-8048-1915-7 .
Constantine, Peter. Japan's Sex Trade: A Journey Through Japan's Erotic Subcultures . Tokyo: Yenbooks, 1993. ISBN 4-900737-00-3 .
De Becker, J. E. The Nightless City ... or, The "History of the Yoshiwara Yūkwaku". , 4th ed. rev. Yokohama [etc.] M. Nössler & Co.; London, Probsthain & Co., 1905. ISBN 1-933330-38-4 .
De Becker, J. E. The Nightless City: Geisha and Courtesan Life in Old Tokyo (reprint). Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications, 2007. ISBN 0-486-45563-7 .
De Mente, Boye Lafayette. Mizu Shobai: The Pleasure Girls and Flesh Pots of Japan. London: Ortolan Press, 1966.
De Mente, Boye Lafayette. Sex and the Japanese: The Sensual Side of Japan . Rutland, Vermont: Tuttle Publishing, 2006. ISBN 0-8048-3826-7 .
De Mente, Boye Lafayette. Tadahito Nadamoto (illus.). Some Prefer Geisha: The Lively Art of Mistress Keeping in Japan . Rutland, Vermont: Charles E. Tuttle Co., 1966.
Fitzpatrick, William. Tokyo After Dark . New York: McFadden Books, 1965.
French, Howard W. "Japan's Red Light 'Scouts' and Their Gullible Discoveries" . The New York Times . 15 November 2001. Accessed 11 October 2006.
Goodwin, Janet R. Selling Songs and Smiles: The Sex Trade in Heian and Kamakura Japan . Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, 2007. ISBN 0-8248-3068-7 , ISBN 0-8248-3097-0 .
Japan The Trafficking of Women .
Kamiyama, Masuo. " The day Japan's red lights flickered out ". MSN-Mainichi Daily News. 25 February 2006. Accessed 11 October 2006.
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McMurtrie, Douglas C. Ancient Prostitution in Japan . Whitefish, Montana: Kessinger Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1-4253-7206-6 . Originally published in Stone, Lee Alexander (ed.). The Story of Phallicism volume 2. Chicago: Pascal Covici, 1927. Reprinted Whitefish, Montana: Kessinger Publishing, 2003. ISBN 0-7661-4115-2 .
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Prostitution in Japan .
Prostitution in Japan has existed throughout the country's history . While the Prostitution Prevention Law of 1956 states that "No person may either do prostitution or become the customer of it", loopholes, liberal interpretations and a loose enforcement of the law have allowed the Japanese sex industry to prosper and earn an estimated 2.3 trillion yen ($24 billion) per year. [1]

Sex trade and sex services may be referred to as fūzoku ( 風俗 ) , which also means "manners", "customs" or "public morals".

Since Japanese law defines prostitution as "intercourse with an unspecified person in exchange for payment", most fūzoku services offer specifically non-coital services, such as conversation, dancing or bathing, sometimes accompanied by sexual acts that legally are not defined as "intercourse", in order to remain legal. [2]

From the 15th century, Chinese , Koreans , and other East Asian visitors frequented brothels in Japan. [3]

This practice later continued among visitors from "the Western regions ", mainly European traders who often came with their South Asian lascar crew (in addition to African crew members in some cases). [4] This began with the arrival of Portuguese ships to Japan in the 1540s, when the local Japanese people assumed that the Portuguese were from Tenjiku ( 天竺 , "Heavenly Abode") , the ancient Chinese name (and later Japanese name) for the Indian subcontinent , and thus assumed that Christianity was a new Indian religion . These mistaken assumptions were due to the Indian state of Goa being a central base for the Portuguese East India Company at the time, and due to a significant portion of the crew on Portuguese ships being Indian Christians . [5]

More than hundreds of Japanese people, especially women, were sold as slaves. [6] Portuguese visitors and their South Asian and African crew members (or slaves) often engaged in slavery in Japan . They bought or captured young Japanese women and girls, who were either used as sexual slaves on their ships or taken to Macau and other Portuguese colonies in Southeast Asia , the Americas , [4] and India , where there was a community of Japanese slaves and traders in Goa by the early 17th century. [7] Anti-Portuguese propaganda and exaggerations were actively promoted by the Japanese, particularly with regards to the Portuguese purchases of Japanese women for sexual purposes. [8]

In 1505, syphilis started to appear in Japan, likely because of Japanese prostitutes having sex with Chinese sailors. In Sakai and Hakata ports, Japanese brothels had already been patronized by Chinese visitors far before Europeans came to Japan. When the Europeans ( Nanbanjin ) came to Japan, they too patronized Japanese prostitutes. [3] Traders of the various European East India Companies, including those of the Dutch and British , engaged the services of prostitutes while visiting or staying in Japan. [9]

In 1617, the Tokugawa Shogunate issued an order restricting prostitution to certain areas on the outskirts of cities, known as yūkaku ( 遊廓、遊郭 , lit. 'pleasure quarter') . [10] The most famous of these were Yoshiwara in Edo (present-day Tokyo ), Shinmachi in Osaka , and Shimabara in Kyoto . [11] [12]

Pleasure quarters were walled and guarded for taxation and access control. [10] Prostitutes and courtesans were licensed as yūjo ( 遊女 , "women of pleasure") and ranked according to an elaborate hierarchy , with tayū and later oiran at the apex. [11] The women were not allowed outside of the walls except to visit dying relatives and, once a year, for hanami (viewing cherry blossoms ). [10] [13] [14]

Japanese women engaged in sexual relations with foreign men like Chinese and Europeans at port cities like Hirado . In 1609, a post was set up in Hirado by the Dutch East India Company. Unmarried women could be rented from their parents for a few months or weeks by foreign sailors who were stranded there during typhoons . After several summers, she would retire from prostitution and then marry after getting a trousseau from the money she earned from sex work. In some cases, Japanese women would marry the foreign traders or enter into a long-term relationship as their permanent concubine. [ citation needed ]

How Japanese women and foreign men engaged in sexual relations varied by situation and could lead to some strange cases. Once, two Japanese women bore daughters at the same time to Cornelis van Nijenroode , a Dutch merchant who was made the trading posts' chief factor in 1623. Zheng Chenggong (Coxinga), a Chinese Ming loyalist that would eventually become Prince of Yanping , was born from relations between a Japanese woman and the Chinese Hokkien trader Zheng Zhilong . One of Tokugawa Ieyasu 's key advisors, Englishman William Adams , was married to the daughter of the Honshu headman and also had a Japanese concubine while living in Hirado. [15]

Chinese men visiting Edo period Japan also patronized Japanese sex workers in brothels designated for them. Japanese women designated for Chinese male customers were known as kara-yuki , while Japanese women designated for Dutch men at Dejima were known as oranda-yuki , and Japanese women servicing Japanese men were called nihon-yuki . Karayuki-san was the term used for all Japanese women serving foreigners in sexual capacities during the Meiji period . The price of the girls offered to Japanese and Chinese customers was significantly lower than the price of the girls designated for Dutch customers. This disparity was likely not noticed by the Dutch, as their traders were confined to the designated post of Dejima where oranda-yuki prostitutes were sent. Many prostitutes were sent to Dejima after they serviced the Chinese at Maruyama; they were paid for by the Commissioners for Victualing. [16] [17]

Initially, Chinese men were much less restricted than the Dutch were at Dejima. They could live all over Nagasaki and, from 1635, could have sex with both the kara-yuki Japanese prostitutes and ordinary Japanese women, unlike Dutch men who were limited to prostitutes. Eventually, however, the rules that applied to Dutch were applied to the Chinese. They were put into Chinese settlements like Jūzenji-mura and Tōjun-yashiki in 1688 and were allowed only to have sex with the kara-yuki prostitutes sent to them. Some Chinese men developed long term romances with the Japanese girls: Chinese Suzhou (Su-chou) merchant Chen Renxie (Ch'ên Jên-hsieh) and Japanese Azuyama woman Renzan committed suicide together in 1789 as a result of a lover's pact; the Chinese He Minde (Ho Min-tê) pledged eternal love in Yoriai-machi with the Chikugoya Japanese girl Towa, who later killed herself to join him in death when he was executed for forgery in 1690.

The Chinese men were very generous with their gifts to Japanese women and were in turn praised for it. This long-term patronage was possible because the Japanese prostitutes would violate laws stating that they were only permitted each to spend one night in the Chinese settlement. After reporting to the guards by the settlement gates in the morning that they were leaving, the women would then retrace their steps and return inside. [ citation needed ]

Under the laws and regulations of the Shōtoku era (1711–1716), children of Japanese women and foreign (either Dutch or Chinese) men born in Maruyama were considered mixed race. These children had to stay in Japan and could not be taken back to their father's country, but their fathers could fund their education. This happened quite frequently. For example, Nanking Chinese captain Huang Zheqing (Huang Chê-ch'ing) fathered a son named Kimpachi with Yakumo, a Japanese woman from Iwataya. When he came back to Nagasaki in 1723 at the age of 71, he requested a permit from the Chief Administrator's Office of Nagasaki to trade goods to create a fund for his son to live on for all his life.

Aspects of 17th- and 18th-century Chinese culture were introduced to Japan because of these relations. Chinese dishes and other delicacies became mainstream favourites because of Chinese men teaching Japanese prostitutes how to make them. In the Genroku era (1688-1704), a Chinese man instructed the Japanese prostitute Ume how to make kōsakō , a soft sweet made from sugar and rice flour that is shaped like a plum blossom. Her name also meant plum blossom.

The Japanese prostitutes of Maruyama who served the Chinese men in Nagasaki were taught many songs and dances of Chinese origin. For example, the Kagetsu Entertainment (Kagetsu yokyō) booklet contained information about songs the Chinese men taught to their Japanese lovers, describing how they were sung in Tōsō-on with instruments like hu-kung (two-stringed violin), ch'i-hsien-ch'in (seven-stringed dulcimer), and yüeh-ch'in (lute). The gekkin ( yüeh-ch'in ) were used to play Kyūrenhwan songs. The Kankan-odori dance accompanied one of these songs which spread in Edo and Kyoto as it gained fame. Exhibitions of the original Chinese style dance were also arranged by Takahashi Kageyasu (1785–1829), the court astronomer of the Shogunate, to be performed in Edo. He sent for the Nagasaki officials managing the Chinese settlements and requested that the geisha come to perform.

The opening of Japan and the subsequent flood of Western influences into Japan brought about a series of changes in the Meiji period . Japanese novelists, notably Higuchi Ichiyō , started to draw attention to the confinement and squalid existence of the lower-class prostitutes in the red-light districts. In 1872, the María Luz Incident led Government of Meiji Japan to make a new legislation, emancipating burakumin outcasts , prostitutes and other forms of bonded labor in Japan. [18] The em
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