Book Description
Celebrated as the most successful geisha of her generation, Mineko Iwasaki was only five years old when she left her parents' home for the world of the geisha. For the next twenty-five years, she would live a life filled with extraordinary professional demands and rich rewards. She would learn the formal customs and language of the geisha and study the ancient arts of Japanese dance and music. She would enchant kings and princes, captains of industry and titans of the entertainment world, some of whom would become her dearest friends. Through great pride and determination, she would be hailed as one of the most prized geishas in Japan's history, and one of the last great practitioners of this now fading art form.
In Geisha, a Life, Mineko Iwasaki tells her story, from her warm early childhood, to her intense yet privileged upbringing in the Iwasaki okiya (household), to her years as a renowned geisha, and finally, to her decision at the age of twenty-nine to retire and marry, a move that would mirror the demise of geisha culture.
Amazon.com
Now in her 50s, Mineko Iwasaki was one of the most famed geishas of her generation (and the chief informant for Arthur Golden's Memoirs of a Geisha). Her ascent was difficult, not merely because of the hard, endless training she had to undergo--learning how to speak a hyper-elevated dialect of Japanese and how to sing and dance gracefully while wearing a 44-pound kimono atop six-inch wooden sandals--but also because many of the elaborate, self-effacing rules of the art went against her grain. A geisha "is an exquisite willow tree who bends to the service of others," she writes. "I have always been stubborn and contrary. And very, very proud." And playful, too: one of the funniest moments in this bittersweet book describes a disastrous encounter with the queen of England and her all-too-interested husband.
Revealing the secrets of the geisha's "art of perfection," this graceful memoir documents a disappearing world.
--Gregory McNamee
From Publishers Weekly
From age five, Iwasaki trained to be a geisha (or, as it was called in her Kyoto district, a geiko), learning the intricacies of a world that is nearly gone. As the first geisha to truly lift the veil of secrecy about the women who do such work (at least according to the publisher), Iwasaki writes of leaving home so young, undergoing rigorous training in dance and other arts and rising to stardom in her profession. She also carefully describes the origins of Kyoto's Gion Kobu district and the geiko system's political and social nuances in the 1960s and '70s. Although it's an autobiography, Iwasaki's account will undoubtedly be compared to the stunning fictional description of the same life in Arthur Golden's Memoirs of a Geisha. Lovers of Golden's work-and there are many-will undoubtedly pick this book up, hoping to get the true story of nights spent in kimono. Unfortunately, Iwasaki's work suffers from the comparison. Her writing style, refreshingly straightforward at the beginning, is far too dispassionate to sustain the entire story. Her lack of reflection and tendency toward mechanical description make the work more of a manual than a memoir. In describing the need to be nice to people whom she found repulsive, she writes, "Sublimating one's personal likes and dislikes under a veneer of gentility is one of the fundamental challenges of the profession." Iwasaki shrouds her prose in this mask of objectivity, and the result makes the reader feel like a teahouse patron: looking at a beautiful, elegant woman who speaks fluidly and well, but with never a vulnerable moment.
From Booklist
At the age of five, Masako Tanaka leaves her family to be trained as geisha, or geiko, at the Iwasaki okiya in the Gion Kobu district of Kyoto. Not only would she one day become a geiko, but eventually she would inherit the okiya. Accordingly, her name is changed to Mineko Iwasaki, and she is taken in by the current proprietress, Madame Oima. Though she's heartbroken at being separated from her family, Mineko develops a real passion for dance, and throws herself into her lessons. By the time she is ready to become a maiko-- an apprentice geiko--she is already both beautiful and accomplished, and the envy of her peers. She finds herself pursued by a famous, married actor, and to her surprise, she begins to gradually return his affections. Her star continues to rise, and as she entertains celebrities and politicians, she finds herself to be the most successful geiko of her day. Anyone who enjoyed Arthur Golden's Memoirs of a Geisha (1997) will enjoy this memorable account by a real-life former geisha.
Kristine Huntley
From Library Journal
Iwasaki, who started training for her demanding profession at age four, here takes readers into the rarely glimpsed world of the geisha.
About Author
Born in 1949, Mineko Iwasaki began training in the arts of dance and etiquette when she was five years old. Soon after becoming a full-fledged geisha, Mineko was lauded as the star geisha of the Gion Kobu of Kyoto. She held that position until retirement at the age of twenty-nine. Now fifty-two, Mineko has one daughter and lives with her husband in a Kyoto suburb.
Book Dimension :
length: (cm)24.1 width:(cm)16.2
發表於2024-11-25
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圖書標籤: 日本 文化 英文原版
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評分相當喜歡這本書 就是看著纍
評分相當喜歡這本書 就是看著纍
Geisha 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載