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Pink Box: Inside Japan's Sex Clubs | 
enlarge | Author: Joan Sinclair Publisher: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. Category: Book
List Price: $35.00 Buy New: $23.10 You Save: $11.90 (34%)
New (27) Used (11) from $17.95
Rating: 26 reviews Sales Rank: 18952
Media: Paperback Pages: 192 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8 Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 8.3 x 0.7
ISBN: 0810992590 Dewey Decimal Number: 306.740952 EAN: 9780810992597 ASIN: 0810992590
Publication Date: October 1, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description In Pink Box, photographer Joan Sinclair takes us on a journey inside the secret world of fuzoku (commercial sex) in Japan, a world where kawaii (cute) collides with consumerism and sex.
Unrivaled in their creativity and the sheer number of choices, the clubs featured in this book offer their clientele every fantasy imaginable. Subway groping, visits to the nurse s office, and comic book character encounters are just the beginning of the immense list of possibilities that are played out in colorful playrooms for adults where no detail is overlooked. Sinclair s photographs capture it all, while an introduction by sociologist James Farrer provides a brief history of commercial sex in Japan and places the images in the context of contemporary Japanese culture.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 21 more reviews...
Provocative and Erotic December 29, 2006 Victor Leonelli (Phoenix) 181 out of 190 found this review helpful
Most major Asian and European cities have well-traveled Red Light Districts frequented by wide-eyed US tourists. Locals view the sport as a mere curiosity, or humorous interlude. Sort of an Adult Disneyland. Sex is simply no big deal overseas, and why should it be? Tokyo (and Moscow) differ is this aspect. There is a whole Underground of Sex Venues and corporate brothels not accessible to Americans. Not safe to even attempt entry. Pink Box offers a rare and exclusive glimpse inside the perfumed halls of forbidden lust. Tokyo's "Fuzoku" (Sex Industry) is a multi-billion dollar industry, tightly controlled by the Yakusa (mafia). It is very public, yet strictly off-limits to gaijin. It is legal? With a 400 year tradition under their belt, all is winked at by the establishment. As the author sets the story line, Japan's society is formal, strict and polite. With centuries of social roles and traditional uniforms, the below surface sexual desires are too enticing for them not to satisfy. The sex industry is not only a product of society, but a part of society. Expressing no opinion, Sinclair teases you into the Japanese world of naughty to unbridled perversion in toe-curling photo essays of sexcapades. Almost voyeuristic. The menu of sex club delicacies take the form of breaking these rigid societal rules, with a common theme of fondling the cleanest, purest, teenage girls in off-limits role-playing scenarios. You'll discover surreal fetishes, bondage and softcore groping in dens of sin outfitted with one-way mirrors, kinky stages and elaborate sets. Clients immerse themselves in fantasies, from fake hospitals with nurses sans panties, to submissive hentai characters, naughty stewardesses and elevator attendants, disciplining teachers, secretaries and schoolgirls...even illicit gropings in immaculate train cars stocked with frightened, willing teens in short skirts. Obtaining just a written in-depth review of the Pink Trade would be highly praised. But for Sinclair to have such a vividly photographed document coupled with interviews is quite extraordinary. She alternates snapshots from pure innocence to peek-a-boo eroticism in close to 200 crisp, glossy photos shot in 80 different clubs. One compelling, unexpected discovery; the girls' interviews bore no resemblance to the stereotypes so reviled by feminists. While Sinclair's publisher pressed her for heart-wrenching stories, abuse, and psychological damage, she found that it simply was not there. In every discussion she encountered educated, well-balanced ladies making conscious decisions. They enjoy their work, and are quite happy with their psycho-sexual choice of employment, to the tune of a six figure income. Sinclair's erotic Orientalia photography is tastefully raw. It's both a curiosity and a turn on. The controversial undertones make this a great purchase for any couple looking for ideas to stir up the evening. As far as the text, Sinclair is a lawyer, and thus a highly intelligent, engaging writer. Now, if you actually want to actually indulge in these wild festivities in real life around the globe, this book will not show you the how, what or where. (For that, you need Tate's The Hedonist) Pink Box is quite a riveting expose into the bizarre Japanese sexual psyche. Pick up your copy, and close the blinds.
Creative, engaging and edgy October 3, 2006 Julia A. Dowd (San Francisco, CA) 24 out of 31 found this review helpful
This is a fascinating look into an aspect of Japanese culture I never knew existed. Joan Sinclair got incredible access -- access not only to the actual establishments, but access to the inner lives of some of these women and men whom she portrays with honesty and integrity. She has a fresh, exciting lens which comes through not without a revolutionary edge. This is an original. The intro by Farrer is also excellent.
BANNED from Japan!! January 17, 2007 Corrado (Japan) 18 out of 34 found this review helpful
Amazon Japan is NOT selling this book! Just like Paul Schrader's film "Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters" on the controversial Japanese novelist, this book seems to have fallen prey to certain ultra-conservative Japanese sensibilities that have backdoor ways into banning the internal distribution of any publications they deem dangerous to national pride and image. Curiosly, the sex clubs are probably even more embarassing than the Nanking Massacre, for Iris Chang's famous book "The Rape of Nanjing", although yet to be translated, is easily obtainable in English from Amazon Japan as well as from major bookshops in any large city. In a country which prides itself of a relentless defence of the freedom of expression, I increasingly feel that this is more an instrument to allow the publication of jingoistic tirades, pseudo-scientific "demonstrations" of Japanese uniqueness (a.k.a. "nihonjinron") and whitewashed acoounts of WWII than a genuine comitment to a fundamental human right. I wonder if Amazon as parent company (or the copyright holder of "Pink Box") is going to take any legal steps against the behaviour of the Amz Jp.
Pink Box October 12, 2006 A reader (San Francisco) 15 out of 15 found this review helpful
I purchased this book out of an interest in all aspects of Japanese culture as well as that of the international sex industry. It is a beautiful full-color book, with page after page of photographs of sex workers, their clients, and their highly imaginative fantasy environments. Occasionally we will see an image of an actual session-in-progress. The book is professionally neutral, I believe, and leaves it up to the reader to have a reaction. Ms. Sinclair treats her subjects with respect and dignity, and quotes from both workers and clients are peppered throughout, adding additional layers and insight to the author's thorough explanations. I believe it is the ideal ratio of text to photographs. The layout as well (as colorfully designed as FRUiTS, by Shoichi Aoki), I must say, is very attractive and heightens the experience of reading this book, whether reading alone or sharing with open-minded friends on your coffee table. The neon pink vinyl slipcover is the icing on the cake. Excellent piece of work. The website, [...] offers a preview and an interview with Ms. Sinclair.
As much a voyeuristic look inside the pink box as a thorough guide to the menu and customs of the sex industry June 27, 2007 Jessica Lux (Rosamond, CA) 14 out of 16 found this review helpful
Just after her 30th birthday, San Francisco attorney Joan Sinclair returned to Japan (she had been an English teacher there in her early twenties) to embark on an ambitious project of photographing the sex clubs in Tokyo's red light district. She remembered the cornucopia of sex options in Tokyo and had always wondered why it wasn't written about or photographed. She soon learned that the main obstacle was access to clubs. Sinclair couldn't pay her way in, so she cajoled and befriended the right players and now provides both American and Japan with a glossy look behind the closed doors of the sex industry. The book is as much a voyeuristic look inside the pink box as it is a thorough guide to the menu and customs of the sex industry. Clubs offer services in fuzoku (commercial sex) ranging from hostess services in the geisha tradition, to image clubs ("play" rooms to fulfill fantasies with schoolgirls and police officers), to telephone clubs with internet stations and live chat, to a few full-on brothels. Clubs cater to males, females, and swinging couples. Many operate in legal limbo--sex for money is illegal, so customers pay for legal aspects and any intercourse is a private affair between consenting adults. Customers must obey the rules or face ejection and banishment, complete with posted Polaroids of offenders! Looking thought the several hundred photos in this book (of workers, customers, menus, and settings), I was struck by how small the fantasy rooms and cubicles are. Sinclair writes that she often had to shoot with a unipod due to the space restrictions. I especially enjoyed the club menus and questionnaires translated in the book, indicating acts beyond my imagination which can be requested by the customer.
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