Back to the front page
Entertainment

Brutal Beauty: The Dark Reality Behind The Life Of A Geisha

Two geisha, one dancing in blue kimono, one kneeling and playing a shamisen, wearing a pink kimono.
Geisha entertainers, c. 1900 and 1940. OSU Special Collections and Archives, public domain.

Protecting the Geisha

Maiko in blue kimono bowing
Maiko Tomitsuyu bowing after a performance. Japanexperterna.se (2014, CC BY-SA 2.0).

Kiritaka acknowledges that not all okiya ignore the safety and security of their geisha. Not every house is dangerous. And she stresses that the “essence of the geisha” is something to be cultivated and preserved. She hopes the industry rebuilds to be everything geisha have come to stand for; skilled entertainers, artists, and performing artists of the highest level. She hopes that tradition continues to be passed down.

Some tea houses have enacted safety measures to avoid such problems in the future. The tea houses are training maiko on deflecting unwanted advances. Tea houses concerned about the safety of their geisha hold self-defense courses. It is in their best interest to protect the few geishas remaining in Japan and ensure the reputation of their tea house remains untainted.

Written by

Keep reading

Advertisement