Feminist Movements in Contemporary Japan

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A01=Laura Dales
Author_Laura Dales
Category=GTM
Category=JBSF1
Category=JBSF11
Category=JHB
Category=JP
Contemporary Japanese Women
Dawn Center
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Feminist Erotica
feminist grassroots organisations Japan
Full Time Housewife
gender
Gender Equal Society
Gender Equality
gender policy analysis
gender studies
Government Bodies
groups
Hybrid Woman
issues
japanese
Japanese Feminism
Japanese society
Mackie 1995b
NGO Group
non-government
Non-government Women's Groups
Non-government Women’s Groups
NWEC
Parker 2005a
Pop Stars
projects
qualitative fieldwork
Sex Goods
social change Japan
society
Tv Personality
Ueno 1988b
Ueno Chizuko
women
Women's Action Group
women's activism
Women's Affairs Sections
Women's Centre Staff
Women's Centres
Women's Lib Movement
Women's Projects
womens
Women’s Action Group
Women’s Affairs Sections
Women’s Centre Staff
Women’s Centres
Women’s Lib Movement
Women’s Projects

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415459419
  • Weight: 490g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Jun 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In contemporary Japan there is much ambivalence about women’s roles, and the term "feminism" is not widely recognised or considered relevant. Nonetheless, as this book shows, there is a flourishing feminist movement in contemporary Japan. The book investigates the features and effects of feminism in contemporary Japan, in non-government (NGO) women’s groups, government-run women’s centres and the individual activities of feminists Haruka Yoko and Kitahara Minori. Based on two years of fieldwork conducted in Japan and drawing on extensive interviews and ethnographic data, it argues that the work of individual activists and women’s organisations in Japan promotes real and potential change to gender roles and expectations among Japanese women. It explores the ways that feminism is created, promoted and limited among Japanese women, and advocates a broader construction of what the feminist movement is understood to be and a rethinking of the boundaries of feminist identification. It also addresses the impact of legislation, government bureaucracy, literature and the internet as avenues of feminist development, and details the ways which these promote agency – the ability to act – among Japanese women.

Laura Dales is a Lecturer in Japanese and International Studies at the University of South Australia.

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