Archive for Japanese Tattoos
Japanese Full Body Tattoos
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Body art has been a part of our history for well over two thousand years! Body art doesn’t constitute just tribal face painting, but it also includes the more complex process of permanent tattooing. Although tattoos were initially a vital part of a culture’s social and religious rites, they slowly took a back seat as time passed.
As Civilizations advanced, tattoos came to be used more for permanently making an individual (like outlaws and traitors) which was a manner of disgracing them in public. And thus tattoos slowly became associated with criminal behaviour and immoral living. Incidentally, Japan is one of the last countries to actually abolish the practice of disciplinary tattooing.
It is said that this tattooed clique later resorted to full body tattooing in an effort to hide their indignity. As a result, tattoo artists derived a wide range of attractive designs for the whole body. Over a period of time, these full body tattoos began attracting public attention and especially during the Tokugawa period.
The Tokugawa period (dated between 1603 and 1868) witnessed some of the strictest sumptuary laws and the people resorted to full body tattoos as a sign of rebellion. Even though the practice was severely condemned by the Japanese authorities, it continued to rise in popularity! Public display of one’s tattoos in Japan is prohibited by law even today.
The practice of full body tattooing in Japan is most commonly associated with the Yakuza – the Japanese mafia. The Yakuza is said to have formed as a result of the dissolution that the once greatly regulated society experienced. The practice is also said to have many influences – from the Samurai, the Bushido, the sinister side of the Tokugawa regime and even gambling! The higher classes of Japanese society, even today, consider the practice as a barbaric tradition.
For these reasons and many more (not to mention they cost a bomb and aren’t particularly pain free!) the practice is again on a downward spiral. The number of people learning the art has also sharply declined. By the looks of it, this spectacular body art will soon be an extinct art form.
Kanji Tattoos
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Kanji tattoos are nothing but tattoos of Japanese language characters and symbols. These ideographic tend to represent entire objects, ideas or expressions. The reason most people like these tattoos are because they can easily express complex thoughts with just a few characters, plus they are also visually very appealing.
Basically there are two types of characters that are used in the written Japanese language – Kana and Kanji. Kanji is the term used for Chinese characters that are used in the Japanese language. In fact, all written Japanese characters have evolved from written Chinese and over the years have come to include a few modified characters that represent some different sounds in the Japanese language.
Some of these characters may mean the same in both Japanese and Chinese languages but are usually pronounced differently. While some others characters, although written the same way, may mean completely different things. Some Kanji characters were developed fully in Japan and are often not seen in the Chinese language. And then there are those characters that are written with slight modifications but tend to have the same meaning. So basically you have a choice between the Japanese Kanji tattoos and the Chinese Kanji tattoos.
If you are contemplating a Kanji tattoo and you are not a native speaker of the language (which I’m guessing you’re not), the key thing to keep in mind is that Kanji is constructed very differently from the English language. Like I mentioned, these languages are not made up of individual letters but are made up of ideographs or pictographs (some characters consist of more than thirty strokes!)
When you don’t speak the language, you will find it very hard to say exactly what you want through those tattoos. Some problems people frequently encounter with these tattoos are with the meaning. There have been plenty of cases of literal translations which make absolutely no sense in the Japanese language. For instance, “girl power” can be easily written (??) to mean ‘sporty spices!’
Sometimes the artist (if not fluent in the language) may end up mixing up the Chinese and Japanese Kanji characters, again resulting in nonsense. There have been instances of the characters being rotated, written upside down, given mirror image versions, characters with missing brush strokes or some strokes even mistakenly joined resulting in exactly what you did not want! So before you get them on you permanently, be double sure they mean exactly what you think they do.
Japanese Tattoos
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The closest Japanese word for tattoo in use today is Irezumi – a word that suggests the addition of ink under the skin to leave a permanent mark commonly for decorative purposes. The word when written in different ways means different things. It literally means to ‘insert ink’ but with varying letters it could also mean ‘decorating the body’. The actual word for tattooing is very rarely used.
In ancient Japanese history tattooing was used for spiritual and decorative purposes; and this practice dates back to roughly 10,000 B.C! (Surprising isn’t it, to realize something as contemporary as tattoos can be so ancient a tradition!). Although several scholars have suggested that the markings found on the faces and bodies of figures dating back to that period in time represent tattoos, it is not undisputed. There is however, striking similarities between those markings and the tradition of tattoos found in other cultures. The Ainu people (indigenous Japanese people) are also known for their use of tattoos for communal purposes. There is no known connection however, with their practice and that of Irezumi.
Although tattoos were initially used to signify spirituality and status among the ancient society, by the Kofun period (around 300 – 600 AD) people started to use tattoos as means of marking criminals.
Through the years the practice of tattooing altered its significance in the Japanese society; during 1600 AD (the Edo period) however, tattooing began to evolve as the intricate art form – which it is today.
The practice was again outlawed by the Japanese government during the Meiji era (1868 – 1912) in an attempt to impress the rising West. Tattoos again came to be associated with criminals as they continued the tradition underground. They were linked to the Yakuza (the mafia of Japan) for several years and the bias is still visible in contemporary Japan. People with tattoos are still not allowed inside public baths, fitness centres and hot springs.
Kanji Tattoos & Symbols: The Letter “b”
Posted by: | CommentsHere are more kanji tattoo symbols. These are dictionary words that begin with the letter “b”. I’ve covered words that begin with “a” here: Kanji Tattoos and Symbols-The Letter “a”.
As stated previously, I plan to continue through the alphabet. If you want me to provide a symbol in a larger or smaller size simply ask in the comments.
See also: Overview of Kanji Tattoos
Kanji Tattoos and Symbols – The Letter “a”
Posted by: | CommentsHere are a few more kanji tattoo symbols. We’re starting with words that begin with “a”. My plan is to continue through the alphabet. If you want me to provide a symbol in a larger or smaller size simply ask in the comments.
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able
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abundant |
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actor
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Africa |
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air, wind
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animal |
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army, force, troops, battle
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arrow, dart |
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Asia |
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ask, invite |
For more information see also:

