著者
BUCKLAND Rosina
出版者
International Research Center for Japanese Studies
雑誌
Nichibunken Japan review : bulletin of the International Research Center for Japanese Studies
巻号頁・発行日
vol.26, pp.259-276, 2013

This article examines the final period of shunga, customarily defined as erotic imagery produced by the woodblock-printing technique. It takes up artist who continued the earlier traditions of shunga (such as Kawanabe Kyosai and Tsukioka Yoshitoshi) and those who developed new modes (among them, Tomioka Eisen). The new Meiji administration was anxious to suppress material it deemed inappropriate, and new censorship legislation was introduced in 1872. However, the clandestine production and sale of shungacontinued until the early 1900s. As was always the case, quality varies, but the best Meiji era shunga is distinguished by fine draughtsmanship and deluxe printing effects. As part of modernization, women gained new, more visible roles in society and these were quickly taken up as characters in shunga. Japan's engagement in hostilities with first China and then Russia provided the impetus for the further production of erotica to supply to troops. Yet, by this point such material was seen as a potential embarrassment to the nation, and its suppression thereafter intensified. At the same time, the shifting role of the naked body within visual culture had a major impact on shunga, and rival rechnologies, such as photography and lithography, were supplanting woodblock-printing. The result was the emergence of a new genre of sex-related imagery, which, when compared with shunga, is marked by its directly explicit nature and a lack of humour.

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