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The Japanese Bachelor Crisis
| Article
# : |
16288 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
3 / 1989 |
3,300 Words |
| Author
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Ralph D. Sawyer Formerly an assistant professor of history at the University
of Maryland, Ralph D. Sawyer has spent most of the last twenty
years in Asia as an author and translator. His interests
include intellectual history, religion, philosophy, science,
and Asian military classics. |
Modern Japan, which emerged as an economic giant after surviving a century of domestic and international crisis, finds itself in the midst of a predicament that its vaunted industrial and technical expertise can never resolve. This is the "bachelor crisis," at once real and suddenly significant in the lives and consciousness of single men. It poses a problem with astounding implications, causing turbulence in society's basic fabric and expectations.
The crisis has been developing for decades, for it is a question of the relative numbers of men and women of marriageable age. But only in 1987, following the annual census of 1986 and several supplementary population and marriage expectation studies, did it begin to grow in the national awareness. As consciousness of the crisis expanded and the problem suddenly became newsworthy, the basic data was manipulated to depict ever bleaker prospects for single men, particularly when the more sensationalist publications trumpeted the disaster. What might be considered the pivotal instigatory article appeared in the June 1987 Japanese-language issue of Playboy, entitled "The Day When Men Cannot Get Married." The same month's Japanese edition of Penthouse also scrutinized the statistics, and virtually every other magazine--whether men's or women's weeklies, or monthlies--as well as the newspapers, quickly followed suit.
The essence of the crisis is simply that men in the marriage age bracket significantly outnumber women. Depending upon which age groups are compared, the ratio falls between eight and a half to nine women for every ten males. The authoritative weekly Asahi Journal noted both the problem and the growing crisis consciousness, but chose to focus upon somewhat wider age brackets than
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