Ukiyo


is the Japanese term used to describe the urban lifestyle and culture of Edo period Japan, especially its pleasure-seeking aspects.

Ukiyo culture

culture developed in Yoshiwara, the licensed red-light district of Edo, the site of many brothels frequented by Japan's growing middle class. A prominent author of the genre was Ihara Saikaku, who wrote The Life of an Amorous Woman. culture also arose in other cities, such as Osaka and Kyoto.
This middle class, newly rich merchants known as chōnin, were unable to move up the social ladder due to the segregated class system imposed by the Tokugawa shogunate during the Edo period. Chōnin were the lowest class of four, below warriors, farmers and artisans. Due to being economically powerful but socially confined, their assets were turned to conspicuous consumption, arts and culture.
The term in medieval Japan was associated with Buddhism and meant "this transient, unreliable world". When written as 浮世 meaning "the floating world", is also an ironic, homophonous allusion to the earlier Buddhist term, referring to the earthly plane of death and rebirth from which Buddhists sought release.
In its modern usage, the term is used to refer to a state of mind emphasising living in the moment, detached from the difficulties of life.

In arts

The famous Japanese woodblock prints known as, or "pictures of the floating world", had their origins in these districts, and often depicted scenes of the floating world itself such as geisha, kabuki actors, sumo wrestlers, samurai, merchants, and prostitutes.