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Will Japan’s Geisha Survive the Digital Age? [audio]

27 pointsby jmadsenover 8 years ago

2 comments

genkiover 8 years ago
Just happened to see a kerfuffle about this particular &#x27;geisha&#x27; earlier on reddit, and the following was linked: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;missmyloko.tumblr.com&#x2F;post&#x2F;149454238268&#x2F;a-random-psa-on-fake-geisha" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;missmyloko.tumblr.com&#x2F;post&#x2F;149454238268&#x2F;a-random-psa-...</a>
CmdrSprinklesover 8 years ago
I don&#x27;t really see how anything there was &quot;disruptive&quot; and it seems like this is less a factor of technology and more just societal change.<p>The big factors are<p>1. Tourists who don&#x27;t know (or care) what a geisha really is. While the article is awkwardly vague about it, a good way to think of it is that a geisha is a combination of hostess&#x2F;server with entertainer specializing in small crowds and individuals. A Geisha is not actually a prostitute (but they can be). And tourists have cared about as little as they ever did<p>2. The younger generation just not caring either. A large part of this can be seen as a mixture of Japanese culture encouraging a &quot;work hard, play hard&quot; mentality where sitting around and having a nice quiet evening out isn&#x27;t desired coupled with the same &quot;rebellion against the elite&quot; that we see in western nations<p>3. The older generation who is interested and does appreciate it being, well, older. Family men are less likely to spend money on many evenings out and the particularly well off are either adopting the &quot;party hard&quot; life style or just outright hiring the more talented geishas as a mark of status.<p>Tech itself barely factors in to any of that and nothing seems &quot;disruptive&quot; in the slightest.