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  2. ‘Geisha paparazzi’ are back in Kyoto – and the Japanese city ...

    www.aol.com/geisha-paparazzi-back-kyoto-japanese...

    Today, signs in three languages also explain that geisha photography is not allowed without a permit, and that violators could be charged up to ¥10,000 ($67). ... While geisha are only in Japan ...

  3. Geisha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geisha

    After Japan lost the war, geisha dispersed and the profession was in shambles. When they regrouped during the Occupation and began to flourish in the 1960s during Japan's postwar economic boom, the geisha world changed. In modern Japan, girls are not sold into indentured service. Nowadays, a geisha's sex life is her private affair. [39]

  4. Mineko Iwasaki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mineko_Iwasaki

    Mineko Iwasaki (岩崎 峰子/岩崎 究香, Iwasaki Mineko, born Masako Tanaka (田中 政子), 2 November 1949) is a Japanese businesswoman, author and former geisha. Iwasaki was the most famous geisha in Japan until her sudden retirement at the age of 29.

  5. Hanamachi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanamachi

    A summer tradition around the time of the Gion Festival among the hanamachi of Kyoto is to distribute personalized uchiwa (団扇, flat fans) to favored patrons and stores that both maiko and geisha frequent. These feature a crest of the geisha house on the front, and the geisha's name on the back (house name, then personal name).

  6. Kyoto to ban tourists from Geisha district over ‘out of ...

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  7. Sexuality in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexuality_in_Japan

    Geisha were forbidden to sell sex but have mistakenly become a symbol of Japanese sexuality in the West because prostitutes in Japan marketed themselves as "geisha girls" to American military men. A frequent focus of misconceptions in regard to Japanese sexuality is the institution of the geisha. Rather than a prostitute, a geisha was a woman ...

  8. Onsen geisha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onsen_geisha

    Onsen geisha Matsuei of Yuzawa, Niigata, upon whom Yasunari Kawabata based one of the main characters in his 1934 novel Snow Country. Onsen geisha (温泉芸者) is the Japanese term geisha working in onsen resorts or towns, known for their traditions of performance and entertainment style, which differ significantly to geisha working in other areas of Japan.

  9. Taikomochi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taikomochi

    In 1751 the first onna geisha (female geisha) arrived at a party and caused quite a stir. She was called geiko ("arts girl"), which is still the term for geisha in Kyoto today. By the end of the 18th century these onna geisha outnumbered taikomochi to the point that, having become so few in number, they became known as otoko geisha ("male geisha").