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Women in Modern Japan
| Article
# : |
10850 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
7 / 1986 |
5,412 Words |
| Author
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Rene Peritz Rene Peritz is a professor of political science at Slippery
Rock University in Pennsylvania, specializing in comparative
politics. He has spent the last several years writing on East
Asian affairs. |
Many of the cultural influences on Japanese women pertaining to status, self-image, and sense of identity are taken for granted in descriptions of the Japanese national character. Ideological explanations of the roles and functions of women in the social world correspond to an idealized description of women as passive agents of social change. Belief in women as active participants in the process of social change tends to be private, unpublicized, and only occasionally expressed in the media.
Women who hold views on public and controversial social matters tend to remain faceless, invisible, and vulnerable to the many pressures that bear on their social and legal existence. Moreover, when the assumptions about the "proper" and "legitimate" roles of women are discussed and questioned, as derivative of a particular cultural milieu, the issue is often raised by Japanese men who want to modify traditional aspects of the existing system.
In Japan, the women's liberation (ribu) movement, which might have been central in any public discussion on women's behavior and attitudes, has remained quiescent and marginal, cut off from a mass base and having limited support outside of a few cities. The ribu movement is of peripheral interest to women not directly concerned with it.
Within this context it becomes pertinent to examine some of the elements that have contributed to Japanese social organization, in which membership in a group means the containment of personal interests at the expense of the free expression of persons of both sexes undertaking joint responsibilities and common roles. It is equally useful to discuss the private expectations of
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