Edo period shunga sought to express a varied world of contemporary sexual possibilities. Some writers on the subject refer to this as the creation of a world parallel to contemporary urban life, but idealised, eroticised and fantastical.
Characters , "Client Lubricating a Male Prostitute" (while another peers through), late-eighteenth-century print, F. M. Bertholet Collection By far the majority of shunga depict the sexual relations of the ordinary people, the
chōnin, the townsmen, women, merchant class, artisans and farmers. Occasionally there also appear
Dutch or
Portuguese foreigners. Men saw them as highly eroticised due to their profession, but at the same time unattainable, since only the wealthiest, most cultured men would have any chance of sexual relations with one. Women saw them as distant, glamorous idols, and the fashions for the whole of Japan were inspired by the fashions of the courtesan. For these reasons, the fetish of the courtesan appealed to many. However, Utamaro is just one example of an artist who was sensitive to the inner life of the courtesan, for example showing them wistfully dreaming of escape from Yoshiwara through marriage. Very famous actors such as
Sanogawa Ichimatsu I, after whom a pattern in Japanese female clothing was named, retained similar star power in the century that followed. They are often depicted with samurai, since wakashū and older samurai often formed couples with the elder acting as a mentor for the younger.
Stories .
Miyagawa Isshō, ; Shunga hand scroll (kakemono-e); sumi, color and gofun on silk. Private collection. Both painted handscrolls and illustrated erotic books (empon) often presented an unrelated sequence of sexual tableaux, rather than a structured narrative. A whole variety of possibilities are shown—men seduce women, women seduce men; men and women cheat on each other; all ages from virginal teenagers to old married couples; even octopuses were occasionally featured.
Masturbation was also depicted. The perception of sexuality differed in Tokugawa Japan from that in the modern
Western world, and people were less likely to associate with one particular sexual preference. For this reason the many sexual pairings depicted were a matter of providing as much variety as possible.
Non-realism Shunga couples are often shown in nonrealistic positions with exaggerated genitalia. Explanations for this include increased visibility of the sexually explicit content, artistic interest and psychological impact: that is, the genitalia are interpreted as a "second face", expressing the primal passions that the everyday face is obligated by
giri to conceal, and are therefore the same size as the head and placed unnaturally close to it by the awkward positioning. ==See also==