Echoes of the Ochaya: transmedia storytelling as cross-cultural design for reframing geisha perceptions
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Date
2025-11
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Integrated Design Research, Department of Integrated Design, University of Moratuwa
Abstract
The culture of geishas holds a disputed place in world awareness, frequently misrepresented by Orientalist media and reductionist discourse that narrows it down to exotic display or spectacle. These misconceptions mask the philosophical, psychological, and aesthetic aspects of the geisha tradition, all an intangible heritage based in the art of discipline, of transformation, of subtlety in social art. In response to the cultural and academic gap, the present paper studies Echoes of the Ochaya, a transmedia cultural project that reinterprets the living tradition of Kyoto geishas by reimagining them in the discourses of contemporary storytelling frameworks. Applying ethnographic study, cultural analysis, and narrative methodology, the project examines the geisha psyche, representing discipline, flexibility, and impermanence and the client's psychology, defined by expectation, social acting, and the quest for evanescent beauty. The project puts beauty, instead of being an unchanging standard, as a transformative cultural system at the intersection of discipline, performance, and seeing. In that context, Echoes of the Ochaya shows how visual and emotional beauty are social contracts and cultural stories that define human relation. The research demonstrates that transmedia storytelling can reimagine geisha culture as active cultural philosophy instead of passive iconography, generating new systems of cross-cultural understanding. The study concludes that the study offers the potential for transmedia design as an intervention in cultural diplomacy and active engagement, allowing designers to re-interpret intangible heritage ethically in the contemporary world.
