NEWS RELEASE
TORONTO,
November 8, 2016 — The
critically acclaimed A
Third Gender: Beautiful Youths in Japanese Prints closes at
the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) on Sunday,
November 27, 2016. Exploring
issues of gender and sexuality in Japan’s
Edo period (1603-1868), the exhibition has been enjoyed by more than 150,000 visitors since its opening. A
Third
Gender is
on display in
the ROM’s Third Floor Centre Block and is
included with General Admission.
Four
hundred years ago in
Japan, a complex social structure existed in which gender involved more
than a person’s biological sex. Age, position in the sexual hierarchy,
and appearance were also considered.
Fundamental to this structure were male youths termed wakashu.
Neither “adult man” nor “woman”—each a separate gender—they were objects
of desire for both, playing distinct social and sexual roles. They
constituted a third gender and are visually represented
in approximately 60 beautiful Edo period woodblock prints
(ukiyo-e) in the exhibition.
A Third Gender is the first North American display on
wakashu.
For the full release, go to http://www.rom.on.ca/en/about-us/newsroom/p
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