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- Geisha abstract "Geisha (芸者), geiko (芸子) or geigi (芸妓) are traditional Japanese female entertainers who act as hostesses and whose skills include performing various Japanese arts such as classical music, dance and games.".
- Geisha thumbnail Miehina_inaho.jpg?width=300.
- Geisha wikiPageExternalLink viewcontent.cgi?article=1072&context=student_scholarship.
- Geisha wikiPageExternalLink 9784770030672.html.
- Geisha wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Geisha wikiPageID "18617998".
- Geisha wikiPageRevisionID "604844928".
- Geisha hasPhotoCollection Geisha.
- Geisha sign Liza_Dalby.
- Geisha sign "Boye De Mente".
- Geisha sign "Iwasaki Mineko".
- Geisha sign "Kenneth Champeon".
- Geisha sign "Liza Dalby".
- Geisha sign "Mineko Iwasaki in interview".
- Geisha source The_Phoenix_(newspaper).
- Geisha source "Do They or Don't They?".
- Geisha source "East Wind Melts the Ice".
- Geisha source "Geisha, A Life".
- Geisha source "Some Prefer Geisha".
- Geisha source "The Floating World".
- Geisha text ""Geishas are not submissive and subservient, but in fact they are some of the most financially and emotionally successful and strongest women in Japan, and traditionally have been so."".
- Geisha text ""The biggest industry in Japan is not shipbuilding, producing cultured pearls, or manufacturing transistor radios or cameras. It is entertainment."".
- Geisha text ""There is currently no western equivalent for a geisha—they are truly the most impeccable form of Japanese art."".
- Geisha text "1960.0".
- Geisha text "The geisha system was founded, actually, to promote the independence and economic self-sufficiency of women. And that was its stated purpose, and it actually accomplished that quite admirably in Japanese society, where there were very few routes for women to achieve that sort of independence.".
- Geisha text "mizuage is technically illegal. Yet it is one of those things that while officially denied, still undoubtedly occurs sub rosa. Since apprentice maiko are now all over the age of consent anyway, they currently have a say in whether they have a mizuage or not, and it is no longer mandatory to be deflowered in order to come of age as a geisha.".
- Geisha subject Category:Dances_of_Japan.
- Geisha subject Category:Entertainment_occupations.
- Geisha subject Category:Geisha.
- Geisha subject Category:Japanese_artists.
- Geisha subject Category:Japanese_culture.
- Geisha subject Category:Japanese_musicians.
- Geisha subject Category:Japanese_society.
- Geisha subject Category:Performing_arts_in_Japan.
- Geisha comment "Geisha (芸者), geiko (芸子) or geigi (芸妓) are traditional Japanese female entertainers who act as hostesses and whose skills include performing various Japanese arts such as classical music, dance and games.".
- Geisha label "Geisha".
- Geisha label "Geisha".
- Geisha label "Geisha".
- Geisha label "Geisha".
- Geisha label "Geisha".
- Geisha label "Geisha".
- Geisha label "Gejsza".
- Geisha label "Gueixa".
- Geisha label "Гейша".
- Geisha label "غيشا".
- Geisha label "艺妓".
- Geisha label "芸妓".
- Geisha sameAs Gejša.
- Geisha sameAs Geisha.
- Geisha sameAs Γκέισα.
- Geisha sameAs Geisha.
- Geisha sameAs Geisha.
- Geisha sameAs Geisha.
- Geisha sameAs Geisha.
- Geisha sameAs 芸妓.
- Geisha sameAs 게이샤.
- Geisha sameAs Geisha.
- Geisha sameAs Gejsza.
- Geisha sameAs Gueixa.
- Geisha sameAs m.0p285.
- Geisha sameAs Q82723.
- Geisha sameAs Q82723.
- Geisha wasDerivedFrom Geisha?oldid=604844928.
- Geisha depiction Miehina_inaho.jpg.
- Geisha isPrimaryTopicOf Geisha.