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Cosplay restaurants (コスプレ系飲食店, Kosupure-kei inshokuten) are theme restaurants and pubs that originated in Akihabara, Tokyo, Japan, around the late 1990s and early 2000s.[1][2][3] They include maid cafés (メイドカフェ, Meido kafe) and butlers café (執事喫茶, shitsuji kissa), where the service staff dress as elegant maids, or as butlers. The staff treat the customers as masters and mistresses in a private home rather than merely as café customers. Such restaurants and cafés have quickly become a staple of Japanese otaku culture.

The popularity of cosplay restaurants and maid cafes has spread to other regions in Japan, such as Osaka's Den Den Town as well as to places outside Japan, such as Hong Kong[4], Taiwan[5], Singapore[6], Mexico[7], Canada[8], and the Philippines.[9]

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Characteristics

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Maid café

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In a standard maid cafe the female employees dress up as french maids (occasionally, the maids may wear rabbit or cat ears for extra cute appeal) and refer to the customers as either Master (ご主人様, goshujinsama) or Mistress (お嬢様, ojōsama). Upon entering one of such stores, the customer is greeted with the customary "Welcome home, Master" (お帰りなさいませ、ご主人様!, Okaerinasaimase, goshujinsama), offered a wipe towel and shown a food/drink menu. Popular dishes include cakes (sometimes baked by the maids themselves), ice-cream, omurice, spaghetti, as well as drinks such as Coca-Cola, tea, milk or alcoholic beverages such as beer or, in some cases, even champagne. Other options (of service) include taking polaroid pictures (either of the maid alone, together with another maid or with the customer, which are then decorated using colored markers or stickers), playing card, video games, and/or even slightly more unusual ones, such as being slapped by one or more of the maids.[10]

There exists a wide range of establishments catering to specific tastes and offering different services to customers. Recently, with the maid cafe scene booming, additional related services have become popular. These include ear cleaning (耳かき, Mimikaki), a foot or hand massage, photography sessions (the customer typically rents time in a studio during which he can tell a maid which costume to wear and how to pose) or even "dates" with maids. With the popularity of maid cafes, a number of other businesses have followed. Within Akihabara alone one can find several legitimate massage parlors, a maid eyeglass store, and at least one cosplay/maid izakaya.

Other Variants

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In other stores, the outfits and even the setting itself change. In school-themed cafes, for example, customers are referred to as senpai instead of Master or Mistress. Inside, regular tables are replaced by school desks and even the menu is served in trays reminiscent of the ones used in Japanese schools. Other themes include, little sister (, imōto), shrine girl (巫女, miko) or railway (鉄道, tetsudō) cafes/izakaya.

Butler café

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While most cosplay restaurants and maid cafes cater mostly to men, there is also a type for women called the butler café (執事喫茶, shitsuji kissa). The butlers in these cafes are well-dressed male employees and may wear either a typical waiter's uniform or even a tuxedo or tails.[11] One butler cafe has its waiters cosplay as teenage schoolboys, in an effort to appeal to the fujoshi who enjoy Boys' Love.[12]

There are also cross-dressing (male disguise style (男装系, dansō-kei)) butler cafes, where female staff dress up as butlers, instead of actual men.

Cat-Maid cafe

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Another sub-genre of maid cafe is the cat-maid cafe. Waitresses in these cafes will wear cat ears and tails and often make puns by meowing or punctuate sentences with a meow.[13] Additionally, food will often be prepared to resemble cats or kittens.

Tsundere café

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These cafes have all the characteristics of a typical maid cafe with the addition of a personality theme. The theme has every maid assume a "tsundere" personality archetype wherein he servers in these cafes will often act rude or indifferent to customers. Additionally, some cafes like this allow for the patron to order special service which usually comes in some form of abuse like getting flicked in the forehead.[14]

References

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Category:Wikipedia Student Program

Category:Wikiedu.org course templates

  1. ^ A Quantum City: Mastering the Generic
  2. ^ The Origins and History of Cosplay
  3. ^ Best Cosplay Cafés in Tokyo
  4. ^ "A Visit to Mongkok's Japanese 'Maid Cafe'". Hong Wrong. 2013-10-02. Retrieved 2019-11-03.
  5. ^ "Google Maps". Google Maps. Retrieved 2019-11-16.
  6. ^ Ang, Veron. "Cawaii Koohii Maid Cafe – Fun Cosplay Café in Singapore".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ "Google Maps". Google Maps. Retrieved 2019-11-16.
  8. ^ "Google Maps". Google Maps. Retrieved 2019-11-16.
  9. ^ "MeiDolls Cosplay Cafe in Manila • Our Awesome Planet". Our Awesome Planet. 2011-04-27. Retrieved 2019-11-16.
  10. ^ Patrick, Galbraith (2017-10-31). "Maid cafés: affect, life and escape in Akihabara". Escaping Japan : Reflections on Estrangement and Exile in the Twenty-First Century: 28–39 – via Proquest Ebook Central.
  11. ^ Full-scale 'butler cafe' opens doors in Akihabara district[dead link], Mainichi Daily News, Retrieved April 3, 2007
  12. ^ Yoko Kubota (29 February 2008). "Boy cafes, sexy comics feed Japan's girl geek boom". Yahoo! India News. Reuters. Archived from the original on 28 December 2008. Retrieved 31 December 2013.
  13. ^ Sharp, Luke. "Maid meets mammal: the 'animalized' body of the cosplay maid character in Japan." Intertexts, vol. 15, no. 1, 2011, p. 60+. Gale Academic Onefile, https://link-gale-com.ezproxy.lib.utah.edu/apps/doc/A261319554/AONE?u=marriottlibrary&sid=AONE&xid=fe33d7ef. Accessed 2 Nov. 2019.
  14. ^ Boon, Katie (2018-01-24). "Tsundere Cafe In Woodlands Lets You Get Scolded And Insulted By Japanese Maids". EatBook.sg. Retrieved 2019-12-14.