Taishō maid

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Machibitokozu.jpg
Machibito Kozu (待ち人来ず). Author: Gin ()[1]
Base Info
Moe Point Jyokyū (女給じょきゅう)
Kyūji-onna (給仕きゅうじおんな)
Moe Point Synonyms Taishō maid (大正たいしょうメイド)
Related Moe Points Maid

A taishō maid is a type of maid, the imaginary combination of maid culture and Taishō romance, and one of the moe points in ACG subculture.

Introduction

Origin

Strictly speaking, in the Taishō era when there was no ACG maid culture today, the "Taisho maids" were only the aesthetic imagination of today's people. However, back in the late Meiji and early Taishō period, when cafes first became popular, the women who were active in it (the kyūji-onna) were a real presence in the new pop culture. Enlightenment and romanticism brewed a social trend of pursuing individual liberation, and the cafés, as a foreign thing, initially attracted groups of cultural people with petty upper-class sentiments to meet and hold events in it. Some Osaka-centered cafes were the first to offer jobs to the then newly liberated women. These old "maid cafes" were also called Osaka-style cafes in those days.[2]

The image of a kyūji-onna appears in ACG works set in the Taishō era, usually reflecting the typical style of "East meets West" and "eclecticism with the West" of that era: a plain white frilly apron with small furisode and an andon bakama, or the image of dark groundless furisode.

Usually there was no fixed salary for the kyūji-onna, and the income came mainly from tips of the customers. The amount of pay depended on the level of service provided to the women themselves, however, the simple act of serving tea or water almost limited them to smile to win the goodwill of customers. With the changing times and the increasing competition in the same industry, the service of "selling smiles" has developed into one-on-one conversation, dancing, physical contact and escorting. The "Taishō romance" between the famous writers and the kyūji-onna of that era is unique. And after cafes, which were places for kyūji-onna, it irreversibly spread from the upper class to the common people, and the kyūji-onna industry had been completely transformed into a sex industry, seizing the blank space left over from the abolition of public prostitution, making it be incorporated into the pornography control of the Police Department back in 1933.[2] From its rise to its fall in the early Showa period, the kyūji-onna with an impression of pure love spanned a period of the Taishō era which was neither too long, nor too short.

A group of Taishō maids in a "Japanese-Western mix" style[3]

References