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Good things about my job:
Someone must have taken some class on the history of Asian-Americans, because they just sold their books to us. The boss was going to turn a few away because they had been slightly highlighted, then noticed I was very interested in one book on Chinese prostitution in early San Francisco, and drew my attention to those. Ha, five dollars! Then employee discount ^_^.
I feel kind of bad that I was an East Asian Studies major and know almost nothing about this stretch of history -- mostly I did Japanese pop culture and ancient Chinese history (and pre-modern Japanese history, 1600-on). Plus, prostitution.
Sexual history/politics really interests me. And it'll be nice to know about this in addition to Japanese hostesses and the geisha and Yoshiwara.
Now I need to find something on Chinese prostitutes/courtesans in pre-modern China!
Someone must have taken some class on the history of Asian-Americans, because they just sold their books to us. The boss was going to turn a few away because they had been slightly highlighted, then noticed I was very interested in one book on Chinese prostitution in early San Francisco, and drew my attention to those. Ha, five dollars! Then employee discount ^_^.
I feel kind of bad that I was an East Asian Studies major and know almost nothing about this stretch of history -- mostly I did Japanese pop culture and ancient Chinese history (and pre-modern Japanese history, 1600-on). Plus, prostitution.
Sexual history/politics really interests me. And it'll be nice to know about this in addition to Japanese hostesses and the geisha and Yoshiwara.
Now I need to find something on Chinese prostitutes/courtesans in pre-modern China!
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Weird, totally forgot about that! Thanks!
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I haven't read the Iwasaki memoir, although I've seen it floating around. I actually liked Arthur Golden's book until I read two more books on geisha. Liza Dalby's is interesting, esp. since she's known for being the only non-Japanese person to become a geisha for her anthropology degree at Berkeley (I think). Dalby is very much in love with the idea of geisha, though, and that gets in the way of the book. Lesley Downer has another one that I think buys too much into the entire myth of the geisha and romanticizes it too much.
Cecilia Sagawa Seigle's Yoshiwara is a very good (and perhaps the only) look at the floating world/ukiyo of Edo Japan (1600-1868), of the courtesans and their decline and of the eventual rise of the geisha.
Anne Allison's Nightlife is a good look at the mizushobai (water business aka prostitution) of modern Japan, especially of the entire culture of hostesses and bar maids and the salary men who frequent them.
I also like Gregory M. Pflugfelder's Cartographies of Desire: Male-Male Sexuality in Japanese Discourse, 1600-1950. Not prostitution per se, although it covers the kabuki actors who were kind of like male prostitutes.
Hee, that was probably too much info ;). Wow, I really need to buy more EAS non-fiction!
Storyville
Re: Storyville
But ooo, legal brothel area -- interesting! Hee.
Re: Storyville
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Have you read A Thousand Pieces of Gold? I first read it in high school and found it to be an interesting read on one woman's tale of being sold as a girl into servitude and her path to freedom.
I've read some of Liza dalby's work and she comes across as too enamored with geisha. I really did like Arthur Golden's Memoirs of a Geisha, too. I've mostly read a lot of murder/intrigue stories set in feudal Japan or China with twists in history, AU, I suppose. And more often than not one of the main characters or larger supporting characters will be a prostitute/courtesan.
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I read one of the murder/intrigue in feudal Japan type books (Laura Joh Rowland I think?) and didn't particularly like it -- felt too much in the Shogun vein of books for me, heh.
If you read A Thousand Pieces fo Gold
Laura Joh Rowland. Read a couple of those books. Definitley Shogun-style. Too much delving into the The Way of the Sword.
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