Agura

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File:Jud-aguraza.svg
The agura position

Agura (Script error: No such module "Lang"., Template:Literal; also called anza Script error: No such module "Lang".) is the Japanese term for the position normally referred to as sitting cross-legged in English.[1]

Description

The buttocks are on the floor (or on a cushion set on the floor) and the legs are out in front, with the knees bent and each foot crossed beneath the other leg.

Cultural background

File:Toyotomi hideyoshi4 (cropped).jpg
Toyotomi Hideyoshi sitting in agura position

In Japan, this posture is considered an informal alternative to the seiza (proper sitting) position, though it is generally deemed unfeminine and uncouth for women if sitting in skirts or certain types of traditional clothing, such as the kimono (mostly due to where the opening is in a premodern kimono, and the fact that women rarely wore undergarments; whereas, under certain circumstances, men could appear in public wearing Template:Em their undergarment, the fundoshi). It may also be considered impolite to sit in this manner in the presence of a superior or elders, unless permitted to do so.[2][3]

References

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External links

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