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Chinese
Courtesans/Geisha
In
almost all cultures, some women had to “sell their smile” –
actually their entire body. In China, yueji, music performers or
music prostitutes, existed as early as 2500 years ago during the
time of Confucius (Warring States, 475-221 B.C.E.). Unlike
modern prostitutes who only perform sex acts, yueji were
professionally trained in the arts of music and dance. At the
courts of kings and noblemen, these young girls, chosen for
their beauty and talent, survived only as long as they could
charm. While most faced a tragic end as their smiles became
wrinkled, or at best became Buddhist nuns, a few miraculously
transformed themselves into noblewomen and even empresses.
In the Ming
dynasty (1368-1644) these elegant, talented, yet “forbidden”
women, now called mingji
(prestigious
prostitutes),
became the fashionable women of their time, much like modern
models and movie stars. Their cultivated skills in
music, poetry,
painting, calligraphy
– and of course the bedchamber -- fascinated wealthy
businessmen, high officials, learned scholars, even prominent
monks. Their would-be clients had to compete with each other for
their favors. Women at all levels imitated their haughty manner,
elegant clothes and elaborate hair styles.

Prestigious Prostitute
Dong Zhujun,
early Republic |

A Japanese Geisha |

A Chinese Geisha |

A
courtesan playing the qin,
early Republic |

Two
courtesans dancing in a superclub |
Most of
these women were born into privilege yet lost it through ill
fortune – death of parents, criminal conviction of a family
member, bankruptcy or abduction. A ruined family might be faced
with the stark choice between selling a daugher or starvation.
Like the rest of the premodern world, China had no social safety
net. For most of these fallen women, there was little hope. Yet
a determined and resourceful few manipulated the system to
attain positions of power and respect. Most prestigious among
them was Cai Jinhua, Golden Flower, who rose from a prostitution
house to marry an ambassador and later became the mistress of
the most powerful European general stationed in China. She used
her influence to stop pillage by European soldiers and even, it
is said, saved the life of the Empress.
Unlike in our own
time, prostitution in China was not just about sex. Not a
furtive encounter in a hotel room arranged from a payphone but a
leisurely orchestrated mutual seduction in which the attraction
was not a bulging chest but elegant conversation and artistic
accomplishment. Actual sex might follow a lengthy and extremely
expensive courtship by the customer involving gifts of jewelry,
lavish banquets, gambling parties and other events put on by the
prostitution house. During this, the mingji who had captured the
customer’s fancy teased his lust into frenzy not only by
flirtatious expressions and body language but also by artistic
accomplishments such as composing poems, playing on the pipa or
qin, and demonstrating
calligraphy.
The Japanese
Geisha and the Chinese Courtesan
Many know about the Japanese geisha but this tradition, and even
its name, came from China. While the geisha tradition continues
in Japan, the remarkable Chinese courtesan culture has passed
into history. Despite the claims of Mao Zedong to have
eliminated prostitution, only the culture was eliminated.
Today in China what are left are jinu, prostitutes who sell only
their bodies, perhaps not even a smile.
The
Courtesan’s Arts

Woodblock print of a courtesan
getting ready to paint |
Courtesans were
trained in the four major refined arts – music, painting,
calligraphy, poetry – the same pursued by scholar gentlemen and
high-society ladies.
In music, they played the zheng (sixteen stringed zither), the
pipa (four stringed lute) the qin (seven stringed zither), and
sang operatic arias as well as tunes from narrative music. Some
prostitutes also specialized in magic and gymnastics. In the Han
dynasty (206 B.C.E. –A.D. 220), a few became famous for walking
a tight rope and performing acrobatics such as somersaulting or
hanging upside down. Not only was there no net, sharp swords
were pointed toward them, ensuring their death should they fall.

A Turquoise Pavilion (Prostitution
House)
named Welcoming Spring in
Harbin, China, early Republic |
For all prostitutes,
however accomplished in the arts, flirting was the most basic
and necessary training. They were required to walk in small,
elegant steps called “shredded
golden lotus steps;”
to flick their eyes dreamily or stare deeply into the
customer’s; to flash flirtatious smiles – revealing or hiding
their teeth. Thrusting the body forward to lure customers was
referred to euphemistically as “offering
your body to preach the Dharma (Buddhist law).”
Mirrors were provided for practicing hair and makeup as well as
mastering facial expressions: delighted, surprised, loving,
tender, shy, even pitiable, or forlorn. However, all these
skills ultimately led to an enchanted customer eager for the
bedchamber. |