The Meguri of the Flower Calendar and the Trick Time Annual Events and Daily Devices in Yoshiwara (Edo Period)
In the Yoshiwara amusement quarters of the Edo period, annual events and seasonal productions functioned as an important mechanism to support both management and culture. The changing seasons, such as the New Year's first party, cherry blossoms at night in spring, cool summer evenings, and seasonal events in fall and winter, were skillfully incorporated into the entertainment, giving customers a reason to visit repeatedly. These events were more than mere entertainment; they were devices that sustained the relationship between prostitutes and customers over time, and they played a role in supporting the economic cycle of Yoshiwara. At the time, Edo, with a population of over one million, had a mature merchant culture and a widely shared sense of enjoying the seasons. The Yoshiwara took this sense and transformed it into a commodity value by visualizing the seasons through changes in costumes, makeup, and gestures. Sake parties were held in the tatami rooms at night, and the b
ehavior of the courtesans itself became a stage direction. Year-round events and daily innovations established Yoshiwara as a cultural industry where time and economy overlapped, and were the driving force that kept the city's entertainment economy moving.
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