Hostname: page-component-745bb68f8f-l4dxg Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-02-05T21:48:27.193Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

BACKLASH, FIGHT BACK, AND BACK-PEDALING: RESPONSES TO STATE FEMINISM IN CONTEMPORARY JAPAN

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 January 2011

Ayako Kano
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania. E-mail kanoayako@gmail.com
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

From the mid-1990s, the Japanese government has promoted the creation of a “gender-equal society,” but since about 2000 this example of “state feminism” has faced a severe backlash. This article addresses the following questions about the phenomenon of Japanese state feminism, its history and its consequence: (1) How did the government policy for a “gender equal society” come into existence, and what explains its remarkably progressive nature? (2) What was the impact of the involvement of feminist scholars on policy-making? (3) What was the initial response to the policy? (4) What was the background of the backlash, who were the people and organizations involved, and what were the main arguments? (5) What has been the response to the backlash? (6) What are the connections and differences between the present controversy and the collaboration between feminism and the state in previous moments in Japanese history?

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

INTRODUCTION

From the mid-1990s, the creation of a “gender-equal society” has been formally promoted by the Japanese government, at the same time as the ideal of a “gender-free” society has been advocated in a less formal way by educators and academics. Since about 2000, these elements of what might be described as “state feminism” have faced a severe backlash. Because the Japanese government's promotion of gender equality has been intimately linked to its effort to increase the birthrate, and because the backlash reveals significant disagreement about the goals and methods of these policies, understanding this dynamic is both a pressing concern and a challenge with long-term implications. What gets lost in the war of words now fought in Japan is the extraordinary range of opinion, held both currently and historically, about what would constitute equality between the genders as well as freedom from gender norms. Excavating this rich history is crucial for understanding the current controversy. At the same time, analyzing the current debates raises important intellectual questions for reevaluating the history of the problematic relationship between feminism and the state in modern Japan.

This article seeks to answer some initial questions that arise out of an attempt to understand the phenomenon of Japanese state feminism, its history and its consequences. These questions include the following: (1) How did the government policy for a “gender-equal society” come into existence, and what explains its remarkably progressive nature? (2) What was the impact of the involvement of feminist scholars on policy-making? (3) What was the initial response to the policy? (4) What was the background of the backlash, who were the people and organizations involved, and what were their main arguments? (5) What has been the response from feminist activists and scholars to the backlash? (6) What are the connections and differences between the present controversy and the collaboration between feminism and the state in previous moments in Japanese history? The following are some of my preliminary findings, necessarily condensed for this paper.

THE EMERGENCE OF STATE FEMINISM

The years from 1995 to 2005 may go down in history as a decade when “gender” became one of the most visible and hotly contested terms in Japanese political discourse. This in itself was rather surprising. What began the mid-1990s was a set of remarkably broad initiatives by the Japanese government to promote gender equality, with what seemed like an unprecedented level of feminist involvement in policy-making, culminating in the 1999 passing of the Basic Law for a Gender Equal Society (danjo kyōdō sankaku kihon hō 男女共同参画基本法).Footnote 1 What followed was a similarly unprecedented level of backlash, different in intensity, quality, and orchestration from the previous types of generic everyday chauvinism. This culminated in 2005 when the questioning of government policy for gender equality reached the highest level of national discussion in the Diet, spearheaded by Abe Shinzō 安倍晋三 who would shortly thereafter be named prime minister.Footnote 2 But soon feminists started to fight back, and by 2006 half a dozen publications had appeared, pulling together academics and activists, again in what appears to be an unprecedented level of networking and alliance building.

All this was rather different from the dynamics of the debates a decade earlier: the debates in the 1980s that led to the Equal Employment Opportunity Law (koyō kikai kintō hō 雇用機会均等法). Many feminist activists saw the EEOL as a kind of demoralizing defeat, in which measures serving as “protection” for women were eliminated without guarantees of “equality.”Footnote 3 And perhaps because of its gradualist nature, the EEOL had not aroused a backlash.Footnote 4 In all senses of the phrase, then, business had continued as usual in the 1980s.

But something happened in the following decades. The 1990s were considered a “lost decade” for the Japanese economy, but for women it could be said to have been a booming decade.Footnote 5 The 1992 Childcare Leave Law (ikuji kaigo kyūgyō hō 育児介護休業法) guaranteed up to a year of partially paid childcare leave for either the mother or the father; the 1997 Nursing Care Insurance Law (kaigo hoken hō 介護保険法) socialized the cost of caring for the elderly, and thus reduced the symbolic and practical burden of daughters and daughters-in-law; the 1998 Law to Promote Specified Nonprofit Activities (tokutei hieiri katsudō sokushin hō 特定非営利活動促進法), also known as the NPO Law, made it easier for women's groups to gain legal status for their organizations; the 1999 Law for Punishing Acts Related to Child Prostitution and Child Pornography and for Protecting Children (jidō baishun, jidō poruno ni kakawaru kōi tō no shobatsu oyobi jidō no hogo tō ni kansuru hōritsu 児童買春 児童ポルノに係る行為等の処罰及び児童の保護等に関する法律) sought to curb sexual abuse of children including child prostitution and pornography; the 2000 Anti-Stalking Law (sutōkā kōi tō no kisei tō ni kansuru hōritsu ストーカー行為等の規制等に関する法律) and the 2001 Law for the Prevention of Spousal Violence and the Protection of Victims (haigūsha kara no bōryoku no bōshi oyobi higaisha no hogo ni kansuru hōritsu 配偶者からの暴力の防止及び被害者の保護に関する法律), also known as the DV Law, criminalized behavior that was previously dismissed as personal, i.e., domestic violence.

The passage of these laws seemed to signal that the Japanese state itself was embracing feminist ideals, or conversely that feminist ideas had made inroads into the highest levels of government. Whether all this was a result of international pressure, or a response to the domestic demographic crisis, a by-product of a fleeting progressive coalition, or the fruits of grassroots feminist activism, or a combination of all these and more, the fact remained that a form of “state feminism” emerged in Japan in the 1990s.Footnote 6 The ensuing backlash forced a revisiting of fundamental questions about the goals and methods of Japanese state feminism. Meanwhile, some feminists initiated, or reiterated, a more critical examination of the government's current gender policies.

“GENDER-EQUAL SOCIETY”

Since about 1995, the Japanese government promoted initiatives that led to the 1999 Basic Law for a Gender Equal Society and the subsequent Basic Plan for a Gender Equal Society (danjo kyōdō sankaku kihon keikaku 男女共同参画基本計画). The specific terminology in these documents is worth scrutinizing in some detail, as it provides significant insight into the intentions and compromises among those who were involved in drawing up these initiatives.

Although “gender equal” is the official English translation given for 男女共同参画 danjo kyōdō sankaku, the Japanese phrase actually means “male female joint participation.” It is an intentionally vague phrase that avoids the Japanese word 平等 byōdō, meaning ‘equality’. The strategic choice of this phrase has been explained by Ōsawa Mari 大澤真理, a feminist economist who has served in the government's Council for Gender Equality 男女共同参画審議会, the main body responsible for formulating the Basic Law. Ōsawa points out that conservative politicians have long been wary of the term 男女平等 danjo byōdō, because they associate it with equality of outcome rather than equality of opportunity, and hence with practices such as affirmative action and quotas – “the paraphernalia of ‘Western-style’ feminism.”Footnote 7 So the term byōdō had to be avoided from the start.

On the other hand, some scholars have also pointed out that the phrase danjo byōdō has been associated with a subtle form of discrimination through differentiation: the Ministry of Education has long used the phrase to signify that men and women have different qualities and capabilities and should be treated accordingly along different lines – albeit with equal respect.Footnote 8 This “theory of different qualities of men and women” (danjo tokusei ron 男女特性論) would lead to justifying different curricula for boys and girls based on their “natural” qualities, talents, and destinies: requiring home economics for girls, technical arts for boys.Footnote 9 These alternate interpretations are enough to tell us that byōdō is a contentious and contested term in Japanese discourse.

It may also be worth noting that sankaku 参画 is a rather unusual word and is hardly ever used in daily conversation.Footnote 10 The more common term sanka 参加 also denotes participation, but the difference between the two terms is telling: the kaku 画 of sankaku denotes ‘planning’, while the ka 加 of the more familiar sanka denotes ‘adding’. Some have pointed out that sanka could just mean inviting women to events planned and hosted by men, in an “add women and stir” approach to gender equality. Sankaku, by contrast, is a term that connotes participation in planning, and arguably calls for a much greater role for women in society.Footnote 11

So although some feminists have insisted that the more familiar and straightforward danjo byōdō should be used instead of the less familiar and more officious danjo kyōdō sankaku, and thus have celebrated any occasion when the phrase danjo byōdō was adopted in an official context,Footnote 12 it turns out that this could actually be a more multivalent and potentially contested term than danjo kyōdō sankaku, which at least has a legally defined meaning, delineated through the Basic Law.Footnote 13 Although the most accurate translation for danjo kyōdō sankaku might be “male female joint planning and participation,” we will abbreviate it in this article as DKS. We will not follow the Japanese government's rather duplicitous practice of using the English phrase “gender-equal society” to refer to DKS unless it is to make a specific point. It may not be too far a stretch to say that what lies at the heart of the recent debates is precisely the difference between “gender” and danjo (‘male–female’) as well as the difference between “equality” and kyōdō sankaku (‘joint planning and participation’).

WHAT IS “GENDER FREE”?

“Gender free” as a term, on the other hand, had its own genealogy within Japanese discourse, and since the backlash initially started as an attack against the ideas and practices associated with “gender free,” it is worth looking at these a little further as well. The term has been traced back to Barbara Houston's article “Should Public Education Be Gender Free?,”Footnote 14 although the Japanese appropriation of the term seems to have been based on a misreading of this article.Footnote 15 Houston was actually critical of the idea of “gender free” educational practices because they could lead to ignoring existing gender discrimination. Houston instead advocated “gender sensitive” educational practices. In 1995 the term “jendā furī” ジェンダー・フリー began to be used by a major women's organization funded by the Tokyo metropolitan government, the Tokyo Women's Foundation (Tokyo josei zaidan 東京女性財団), and by 2001 it had become a widely used term in government, education, and mass media, though its definition was also wide-ranging.Footnote 16

Part of the confusion arose from the fact that “gender free” began to be used widely around the time when the term “barrier free” (baria furī バリア・フリー) became the buzzword in Japan to refer to accessibility for the disabled. Since “barrier free” means eliminating barriers for the disabled, “gender free” can come to mean “eliminating gender.” This was not the intention of most of those who used the term “gender free” – most used it to mean “free from gender bias.” But as we will see later, the backlash would target exactly this blurriness between “eliminating gender” and “free from gender bias”; by deliberately confusing these distinct definitions, the backlash would raise the specter of a society of unisex school locker rooms and co-ed sleepovers as part of its campaign.

FORTUITOUS OR INEVITABLE?

How did the government policy for a “gender equal society” (i.e. for DKS) come into existence, and what explains its remarkably progressive nature? There are answers that point to fortuitous circumstances, the right things happening at the right time. These include the fact that the generally conservative Liberal Democratic Party was forced into coalition with two more progressive parties, both led by women, in the years 1996–1998.Footnote 17 On the other hand there are answers that point to the larger historical forces and global trends. These include the rise of international feminism as well as the rise of domestic grassroots feminism. The more weight is given to the “fortuitous” elements, the more understandable seems the outbreak of backlash, and more grim the prospects for continued advancement for feminists. Conversely, the more weight that is given to the “inevitable” elements, the more tempting it becomes to dismiss the backlash as a temporary setback.Footnote 18

The significant impact of internationalism in Japanese gender policy has been well documented.Footnote 19 As in many other countries, the United Nations International Decade for Women 1975–1985 was the catalyst for the creation of a national machinery in Japan to address women's issues. The series of World Conferences on Women punctuating the decade (Mexico City 1975, Copenhagen 1980, Nairobi 1985) further promoted the development of both international and domestic feminism. The International Women's Year Liaison Group (Kokusai fujinnen renrakukai 国際婦人年連絡会) founded in 1975 in Japan through the initiative of Diet members Ichikawa Fusae 市川房枝 and others, operated as an umbrella organization for domestic women's groups.Footnote 20 The IWY Liaison Group became one of the most powerful national women's organizations, gaining what amounts to a representational monopoly on women's interests through its large membership base and political connections. The government established regular channels of communication with this umbrella group, thus maintaining an efficient and manageable way to incorporate women's voices into policymaking.Footnote 21 The impact of international feminism on Japanese women's issues thus has by now a decades-long history.Footnote 22

In a more direct way, one may count the “Beijing effect” and the “souvenir effect” as among the factors that led to the Basic Law.Footnote 23 The “Beijing effect” refers to the way in which the 1995 Fourth World Women's Conference in Beijing, with its Declaration and Platform for Action, galvanized both domestic women's groups and international pressure for improving the status of women; the “souvenir effect” refers to the way in which the Basic Law's passage was enabled by the Japanese government's desire to tout it as an achievement at the so-called “Beijing + Five” follow-up conference in New York in 2000. The Beijing Joint Accountability Committee (known as “北京 JAC”) was a new Japanese group that emerged from this process; it was less hierarchical in structure than the older IWY Liaison Group, and sought to contact and lobby policymakers more directly.Footnote 24

It is worth noting that this international pressure would eventually leave state feminism vulnerable to backlash based on nationalist sentiment. If one chooses to tell the story of DKS as arising through internationalism and top-down directives rather than through a domestic groundswell, then that opens up the way to claim that DKS is foreign to Japanese tradition and has little social support. Conversely, if both the state feminist policies and the backlash can claim to have support from the grassroots, then this suggests the existence of a profound division within Japanese society.

A narrative about how internationalism has enabled the rise of state feminist policy should, however, be complemented by a narrative about domestic trends, without which the international pressure would not have found traction. These domestic trends are epitomized by the phase “age of women” (onna no jidai 女の時代), which became a slogan for activists as well as advertisers in the mid- to late 1980s. As the percentage of women employed in wage-earning work outside the home exceeded 50 per cent in the 1980s, a trend that the passing of the EEOL both fueled and reflected, women became increasingly important as wage earners and consumers. Women also became more active in the political arena, as female candidates swept through elections supported by activist housewives, memorably described by political scientist Robin LeBlanc as “bicycle citizens.”Footnote 25 Feminism as intellectual discourse bloomed in this climate as well, and books with “feminizumu” フェミニズム in the title sprang up and multiplied on bookstore shelves.Footnote 26 Many scholars involved in this boom of feminist discourse were also actively involved in governmental and non-governmental women's groups. In a trend that has continued to the present day, national and local governments have mobilized women scholars as experts in its various advisory councils addressing issues of concern to women.Footnote 27 These domestic trends in the late 1980s and 1990s have worked together with international trends described above.Footnote 28 As domestic women's groups increasingly engaged in electoral politics and policy-making at various levels, international pressures also led the government to create a national machinery to address women's issues. The fact that Japanese women, including both government officials and NGO members, comprised one of the largest delegations at the 1995 Beijing Conference as well as at the 2000 Beijing + Five Conference provides one index of this conjunction of domestic and international feminism.

FEMINIST SCHOLARS AS FEMOCRATS

What was the impact of the presence of feminist scholars on policy-making? It seems to have been considerable. Ōsawa Mari, an economics professor at Tokyo University, reveals in her interview with feminist Ueno Chizuko 上野千鶴子, conducted in November of 1998 and initially published in May 1999, that the presence of feminist experts like her on the Council for Gender Equality that drew up the Basic Law and Basic Plan was significant, even decisive.

Perhaps most surprisingly, according to Ōsawa's account, the feminist voices on the Council were able to use the vagueness of the term “danjo kyōdō sankaku” to their strategic advantage, interpreting the ultimate goals of DKS as going beyond “women's rights” and reaching the dissolution of gender itself. Thus an explicit connection was made between “gender equal” and “gender free” and this connection was incorporated into the Council's early report “DKS Vision” ビジョン submitted in 1996.Footnote 29

In her interview, Ōsawa Mari reveals several ways in which the presence of feminists on the Council for Gender Equality was crucial. First, she notes that this Council was unusual in that logic prevailed, that members were able to voice their opinions and to produce drafts of reports based on their opinions. This was possible because the bureaucrats (jimukyoku 事務局) had no background in women's studies. In contrast, the feminist experts on the Council had done their homework and it was their logical argument that carried the day.Footnote 30

Second, Ōsawa notes that she took a strategic, two-tiered approach to discussions about gender in the Council meetings: the first was to note the existence of socio-culturally constructed gender differences as opposed to biological sex differences, and to seek the elimination of the former. The second, more advanced tier, was based on a poststructuralist understanding of sexual difference itself as socio-culturally constructed through the gender binary, and sought the elimination of the gender binary. When Ueno voices her disbelief that the second, poststructuralist level of argument was really understood by members of the Council, Ōsawa affirms that in fact they seem to have done so.Footnote 31 She notes that three separate versions were proposed to the Council, and the most radical one was chosen: Version A, aiming for “gender-free,” i.e. dissolution of gender, was chosen over Version B that affirmed biological and social differences, as well as over Version C that avoided using the term “gender” altogether.Footnote 32 This shows that the poststructuralist deconstruction of the gender binary was understood and chosen by the Council as the ultimate goal of DKS.

Finally, Ōsawa points to the difference between the earlier, more traditional versions of national gender equality plans and the 1996 “Vision” proposed by the Council: while the earlier versions focused on supporting women's special capabilities (tokusei 特性) to bear and raise children, the1996 Vision argued the need to overcome the sexual division of labor, and even went as far as aiming for the dissolution of binary gender.Footnote 33

Thus the government's policies for DKS became linked with “gender free” in an important way through the efforts of feminist experts who also served as “femocrats.”Footnote 34 This is also why the backlash would eventually go beyond simply attacking the use and ideas of “gender free” and would strike at DKS as well, and why ordinances pushed by the backlash movement make explicit reference to “not denying the qualities of manliness and womanliness,” retreating to the kind of “theory of different qualities of men and women” that DKS explicitly rejected.Footnote 35

RESULTS AND INITIAL REACTIONS

There have been two significant positive results of the passage of the Basic Law. The first is a new administrative structure that strengthened the agencies in charge of gender policy. The move was intended to “mainstream” gender policy, and is considered to have created a “national machinery” for advancing women's rights in Japan.Footnote 36 Ōsawa Mari has noted that gender policy under DKS was no longer marginalized in a particular ministry within the bureaucratic structure, but was centrally located in the Gender Equality Bureau (danjo kyōdō sankaku kyoku 男女共同参画局) within the Cabinet Office (naikakufu 内閣府). The ability to intervene in the work of other ministries and agencies made the Gender Equality Bureau especially powerful.Footnote 37 Moreover, each ministry and agency was required to create an administrative division charged with DKS initiatives – even within the Defense Agency. Prefectural and local governments also established their own administrative offices and advisory councils for achieving the goals of DKS.Footnote 38

A second outcome of the Basic Law are the various ordinances for DKS passed by prefectures, cities, and further down the municipal hierarchy. Ordinances (jōrei 条例) are the highest kind of legislation that can be passed at these municipal levels, and by calling for these ordinances, and the drawing up of concrete local plans for promoting DKS, the Basic Law fulfilled the function of being a blueprint for change.

Initial reactions to these policies were muted and cautious. It is in fact difficult to find strong early responses, either positive or negative. Some have noted that DKS was not taken seriously by the male establishment.Footnote 39 Ueno Chizuo likened the DKS to a painting of rice cakes (e ni kaita mochi 絵に描いた餅), a well-known metaphor for something that is theoretical and without substance, and at another point as “candy” (amedama 飴玉) – something to toss to children, or in this case women, to stop their complaints, but nothing that will truly satisfy their hunger.Footnote 40

One way to gauge the responses to DKS is to track the appearance of journal articles. The National Diet Library's NDL-OPAC database allows us to see, for example, that the term “danjo kyōdō sankaku” begins appearing in titles in 1991, with one article listed for that year, and that the number of articles rises steadily but rather slowly during the decade, until it more than doubles from 59 articles in 1998 to 155 articles in 1999, the year the Basic Law passed. The number peaks around 2002, but remains in the triple digits to the present. On the other hand, articles with “gender free” in the title begin to appear in 1996 with three articles listed for that year. In the first four years, all references seem to be to positive, but in 2000 the first negative article appears, peaking in 2003 with 22 out of 48 articles taking a negative position against the term. Data such as this support the claim that DKS and “gender free” were not initially received with much academic or journalistic fanfare.

Another way to consider the initial responses is to turn to feminist publications, which are logical places to look for early reactions to these state feminist initiatives. An exemplary case is Agora あごら, one of the longest-enduring journals of the Japanese women's movement.Footnote 41 It published the Council's initial discussion points on DKS and relayed the government's request for “public comment,” publicizing the various meetings to be held for citizens to express their opinions.Footnote 42 But this journal itself declined to take an editorial stance either for or against DKS. This was in marked contrast to the stance it had taken a decade earlier on the EEOL, which it had memorably derided as a “inexplicable law to ban equality” 奇怪禁等法, a pun on “kikai kintō hō 機会均等法” the short version of the Japanese term for “equal opportunity law.”

Various explanations have been given for the initial feminist coolness, even indifference towards DKS, including the fact that the policy seemed to target married couples with children, which struck many feminists as irrelevant to their own struggles to assert women's identities independent of wifehood and motherhood.Footnote 43 Early feminist critiques also noted those dimensions of the policy that amounted to a compromise between the interests of feminists (who wanted to challenge the gendered division of labor), conservative government officials (who wanted to boost the birthrate), and business leaders (who wanted more women to remain in the workforce).Footnote 44 What is also suggestive is that the emergence of “state feminism” – sometimes also disparagingly called “state policy feminism” (kokusaku feminizumu 国策フェミニズム), “institutional feminism” (taiseinai feminizumu 体制内フェミニズム), “administrative feminism” (gyōsei feminizumu 行政フェミニズム) or “bureaucratic feminism” (kanryō feminizumu 官僚フェミニズム) – was regarded by many women with suspicion, and hence the state promotion of seemingly feminist goals was met with skepticism.Footnote 45 There was an emerging split in the 1990s between those who would commit to state feminism and those who would maintain a distance from it. The background of this is related to the history of Japanese women's mobilization by the state, discussed below.

THE BACKLASH

What was the background of the backlash, who were the people and organizations involved, and what were the main arguments? There is no doubt that the resurgence of nationalism has been one of the engines behind the phenomenon. For example, the popular base for the backlash had much in common with that which supported the Japanese Society for History Textbook Reform (atarashii rekishi kyōkasho o tsukuru kai 新しい歴史教科書をつくる会). The group sought to create a new set of overtly nationalist textbooks, in order to correct what it described as the self-flagellating (jigyaku teki 自虐的) tendency of the Japanese educational curriculum vis-à-vis Japanese colonial and wartime actions. The inclusion of the so-called ‘military comfort women’ (jūgun ianfu 従軍慰安婦) issue in the state-approved middle-school history textbooks was an especially contentious point.Footnote 46 Once the controversy began to die down, the nationalists' attention turned to gender as the next target.Footnote 47

The turn to gender issues was likely prompted by another controversy, namely over surnames of married couples.Footnote 48 In 1996, the government's advisory council on legal systems proposed that the civil code be revised to introduce the option of married couples keeping their respective surnames (fūfu bessei 夫婦別姓). For the growing cohort of women sustaining professional careers after marriage, it had become a major inconvenience to have to change one's surname mid-career. Despite the fact that this revision was proposed during a time of feminist upswing, it faced severe political opposition. Conservatives argued that separate surnames would lead to the collapse of the family, tapping into a wider anxiety about social change under demographic as well as neo-liberal pressures.Footnote 49 The forces against the proposal formed an association called the Japan Conference (Nippon Kaigi 日本会議) in 1997, which soon grew into the largest coalition of conservative groups in Japan.Footnote 50 Scholars have pointed out that the eventual backlash against gender policy brought together several disparate sets of advocates, including the advocates for nationalist textbooks and advocates against separate surnames.Footnote 51

The beginnings of the backlash can be traced back even further, however, to certain developments since the late 1980s. It was at that time, for example, that Yamashita Etsuko 山下悦子, a scholar who had previously published insightful studies of Japanese feminism,Footnote 52 began taking contemporary Japanese feminists to task for misrepresenting the true needs of women. Yamashita's main claim was that contemporary Japanese feminism had fallen into an uncritical celebration of capitalism and consumerism, ignoring the needs of married women burdened with childcare and eldercare.Footnote 53

Meanwhile, Hayashi Michiyoshi 林道義, a Jungian psychologist, had begun publishing a number of books in which he advocated the return to the traditional family, with a strong father as authority figure.Footnote 54 He later buttressed it with a book calling for the return of the housewife as the exemplary female figure, as well as a book directly attacking feminism.Footnote 55 These books, too, resonated in a discursive space in which certain successes of the women's movement, such as the raising of awareness about the problems inhering in the sexual division of labor, were blamed for concrete problems in contemporary society, such as the rise in youth crime and higher divorce rates. These earlier intellectual rumblings suggest that the backlash connected with a larger conservative discourse that had emerged by the mid-1990s as a shadow accompanying the splendid spectacles of the “women's age.”

There were thus several elements that came together in the backlash, including “old conservatives” who had been prominent for several decades,Footnote 56 “new conservatives” who had become vocal within the last decade,Footnote 57 conservative politicians,Footnote 58 religious organizations,Footnote 59 and grassroots activists.Footnote 60 There is also evidence that the backlash was orchestrated at a higher level, and the “relay play” within the conservative Sankei 産経 media network played a significant role. First, certain journals such as Seiron 正論 would feature articles by so-called “experts” that would include unsubstantiated episodes about the egregious results of “gender free education”; second, these same articles would be picked up by newspapers owned by the same media conglomerate as the journals, i.e. the Sankei shinbun 産經新聞; third, these articles would then be cited by local and national diet members in their questioning of policy; fourth, this questioning would be reported as news by the same journal and newspapers.Footnote 61 By the end of the media relay, the initial musings of a few pundits have been transformed into newsworthy facts. This tactic illustrates how a small group of conservative voices can come to play a crucial role in forming public opinion. Government bodies sensitive to the critiques from politicians and mass media would begin to institute self-censorship, and eventually the self-censoring moves would begin to replicate themselves throughout society in a vicious cycle.Footnote 62

Politically, the backlash gained traction within conservative and neo-nationalist circles. Yamatani Eriko, a former journalist and editor for the Sankei media network, won a seat for the Lower House in 2000 and went to on head the Liberal Democratic Party's “Project Team for Investigating the Status of Radical Sex Education and Gender Free Education” 過激な性教育 ジェンダーフリー教育に関する 実態調査プロジェクトチーム. The Project Team's “evidence” for rampant radical sex education was eventually discredited by scholars who pointed out that the explicit nature of some of the practices (such as using anatomically correct dolls) were due to the fact that they took place in the context of educating children with special needs. Other instances cited by the Project Team were anecdotal and not supported by verifiable information. Yet the damage had been done. The bashing of sex education, and the retreat to a moralistic education stressing sexual purity over sexual health, were combined with an attack against “gender free” educational reforms that had sought to correct decades of subtle sexual discrimination, such as putting the class roster of boys before the roster of girls.Footnote 63 By the end of 2005, “gender free” was singled out in the government's Second Basic Plan for Gender Equality as a term to be avoided because it would lead to confusion.Footnote 64 The backlash had thus reached the highest levels of government.Footnote 65

While the nationalist undertones of the backlash undoubtedly point to the continued power of conservatives in Japan, there are also other dynamics concurrently at work as well. The backlash seems to have tapped into a surprisingly widespread sense of anxiety and resentment, especially among young men alienated in the neo-liberal transformation of Japanese society.Footnote 66 Internet websites, bulletin boards and blogs have been important loci for the spread of this discourse. Other factors that have fueled the backlash include the continued bleak picture of the economy and an increasing fear that the future looks even bleaker, the specter of Japan's decline in international status as China becomes more dominant, compounded with the sense of social decline as the population ages and the birthrate fails to rise. The conservative turn is exacerbated by the continued “exiting” of women from the workplace and potential spheres of influence,Footnote 67 as well as the continued dominance of older men in politics. The backlash found traction precisely because Japan had been mired in these conditions for at least a decade by 2005.

The argument of the backlash advocates can be summarized as a kind of biological essentialism: their main claim is that there are natural biological differences between men and women, and that this would dictate different social roles for men and women.Footnote 68 The claim is that the state feminist policy (DKS) of promoting the continued employment of women during the childbearing years destroys the “traditional Japanese family” consisting of the male breadwinner and the full-time housewife. Ironically, such a “traditional family” had become the norm in Japan only for about a decade, in the 1970s, during the period of high economic growth.Footnote 69 Yet the conservative discourse found receptive ears in the segment of the Japanese population that identified with the fading vision of such a family. In essence, the state feminist policy upset both men, who felt accused of not doing enough to help with housework and childcare, as well as women, who felt rebuked for not holding on to their jobs while raising children. What proved problematic was precisely the potential of DKS to challenge the traditional sexual division of labor.

FEMINIST FIGHT BACK AND BACK-PEDALING

What has been the response from the feminist activists and scholars to the backlash? The most visible response to the backlash has come from academic feminists: there has been an unprecedented level of networking and alliance building among scholars. Even those who were initially cautious about the term “gender free” have come to realize that the backlash targets more than this term: it is a crisis with the potential to threaten the entire range of ideas and practices associated with feminism, women's rights, and gender equality. Even the concept of “gender” itself – signifying socially and culturally constructed differences to be distinguished from biological sexual difference – has come to be questioned. The Science Council of Japan (Nihon Gakujutsu Kaigi 日本学術会議) created a “Scholarship and Gender” committee to respond to the crisis, pulling together prominent feminist scholars such as Ōsawa Mari, Ueno Chizuko, and Ehara Yumiko 江原由美子.Footnote 70 The Women's Studies Association of Japan (Nihon Josei Gakkai 日本女性学会) published a book with detailed information refuting the arguments of the backlash.Footnote 71 A number of other edited volumes have appeared, constituting a feminist “fight back” ファイトバック.Footnote 72 It should be noted, however, that certain differences in position and emphasis have emerged among those fighting back: some see the defense of government policy for gender equality as primary, while others would continue to maintain some critical distance from it; some see the emphasis on “gender free” as misplaced, preferring to emphasize equal treatment of men and women instead, while others would continue to insist on the importance of dismantling gender norms at a more fundamental level.

The backlash directly targeted the term and ideas associated with “gender free.” The allegation has been that gender free education and the more radical aspects of DKS would lead to an elimination of all sex and gender difference: unisex bathrooms and locker-rooms, girls and boys sleeping together in the same room on overnight school trips, and so forth. Much of this is unfounded, and also familiar to those who remember the backlash against the Equal Rights Amendment in the United States that called forth similar specters of a sexless society to induce panic and confusion.

Some scholars have argued that the term “gender free” is not only based on a misreading of the original use, but is also misleading in many ways and should thus be abandoned as a feminist term. Yamaguchi Tomomi 山口智美 and Saitō Masami 斉藤正美 are among those who advocate a return to the more straightforward term of danjo byōdō, i.e. equality between men and women. The same scholars also object to those aspects of both the government-led and independently organized aspects of the “gender free” initiatives that focus on consciousness-raising and education, arguing that the emphasis should be placed on eliminating discriminatory practices rather than on changing consciousness.Footnote 73

The state seems eager to drop “gender free” altogether. The Second Plan for DKS in 2005 stated that the term “gender free” is confusing, and in 2006, the Gender Equality Bureau issued a recommendation that local governments avoid using the term.Footnote 74 The government back-pedaling on “gender free” can be seen as a tactical move to rescue the core ideas of DKS: equal treatment of women and men. The feminist critique of “gender free” is also motivated by the desire to push this core idea forward. But there is an aspect to this trend that could be worrisome.

The concept of “gender free” in its most inclusive moments gestured not only beyond binary definitions of femininity and masculinity, but also pointed to the fundamental instability of categories such as sex, gender, and sexuality. In doing so, gender free had the potential to reach out to transgender and transsexual individuals as well as to gays and lesbians. In other words, it is my view that “gender free” in Japan overlapped with the concept that is known in Anglo-American contexts as “queer.” The introduction and spread of the concept and practices associated with the term “gender free” coincided with the growing discursive visibility of sexual minorities. It is worth remembering that individuals such as Kakefuda Yuko 掛札悠子 and Fushimi Noriaki 伏見憲明 had begun coming out in publications since the early 1990s, and there was a spate of books on lesbian and gay studies in the late 1990s. Meanwhile, authors such as Tsutamori Tatsuru 蔦森樹 (MtF) and Torai Masae 虎井まさ衛 (FtM) published books about their experience as transgender and/or transsexual individuals. In 1998 the Japanese medical establishment came to recognize Gender Identity Disorder as a medical condition, with sexual reassignment surgery becoming legally available in 2003. Meanwhile, in 1999 the journal Queer Japan クィア ジャパン began publishing, and 2008 saw the founding of the Japan Association for Queer Studies クィア学会.

It seems quite possible that “gender free” had the potential to connect these existing and emerging populations and the presumably much larger population that has felt, to various degrees, constrained by the rigid gender norms operating in Japanese society. Why can a person (of any sex or gender or sexual persuasion) not wear a skirt one day and trousers the next? Why can a person not have long hair one season and a buzz the next? Why not be gender free?Footnote 75 The back-pedaling on the part of the government as well as on the part of some within the feminist community cuts off this potential connection and retreats to a heteronormative position. While DKS comes out of a feminist tradition of critiquing the male breadwinner and female housewife model,Footnote 76 it has not fundamentally critiqued the normative heterosexual family model. That precisely was the unusual potential opened up by “gender free” as an idea and initiative. And in retreating to a position that proclaims “we don't want to be gender free; we just want equal treatment of women and men,” the heterosexist dimension of DKS would be maintained, and the queer potential would be disavowed.Footnote 77

A HISTORY OF STATE MOBILIZATION OF WOMEN

What are the connections and differences between the present controversy and the collaboration between feminism and the state in previous moments in Japanese history? A historical perspective proves highly instructive. The close collaboration of prominent feminists with the colonial and militarist efforts of the state has been well documented.Footnote 78 Women's groups cooperated with the state in prewar as well as in postwar Japan. The government saw this a kind of social management, using women's groups for its own agenda, while women's groups had their own reasons for this cooperation. In the prewar period, women's lack of formal political powers meant that many groups found it useful to ally themselves with state bureaucrats in order to accomplish their goals.Footnote 79 Autonomous women's groups were of course likely to be persecuted and resistance to the state was punished.Footnote 80 Although some feminists tried to resist mobilization into the war effort, they were few, and most were silenced. Most feminists saw the war as an opportunity.Footnote 81

In the postwar period, this cooperation continued for various reasons. Some scholars have pointed out that women have tended to look to the state to achieve their goals because autonomous citizen's groups have been masculinist and unwelcoming to women's efforts.Footnote 82 Miriam Murase shows in her important study of the postwar women's movement that the government has constrained the autonomy of the women's movement through official women's groups and women's centers.Footnote 83 This has created a division between mainstream women's groups close to the state, and radical feminist groups opposed to the state. The emergence of state feminism in the 1990s did little to alter this basic picture. Though more scholars identifying themselves as feminist have been drawn into the various state-sponsored projects for gender equal society, many remain fundamentally skeptical of the goals and methods of government policies.

Some of the trends we have observed in state feminism in contemporary Japan are found in other advanced industrialized nations as well, but some important divergences are also visible. In countries with the most effective forms of state feminism, such as Australia, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Norway, the offices in charge of feminist issues were set up under social democratic governments that prioritized gender equity. Scholars and activists with backgrounds in women's studies were often called to leadership positions at crucial stages in this process, and the term femocrat, coined in Australia in the 1970s, has come to be used generally as a term denoting feminist experts working within government institutions. In each of these “high state feminism” countries, it is also notable that a combination of mainstream and more radical feminist groups have exerted strong pressure on the state, within political climates emphasizing the role of the state in redressing social inequality.Footnote 84

In the case of Japan, the DKS machinery was put in place under a relatively progressive coalition government with the involvement of party leaders, bureaucrats, and feminist scholars who strongly pushed for gender equity. With the collapse of the coalition and the return to a more conservative regime in 1998, the backlash was able to gain traction and eventually reach the highest levels of government. The more liberal Democratic Party of Japan took over in the summer of 2009, but a sense of political paralysis at the top has prevailed. There are few remaining signs of the confluence of domestic and international feminism that had pushed the state towards feminist policy-making in the 1990s. The academic feminist community has fought back vigorously against the backlash, and government advisory councils remain potential arenas for feminist scholars to influence policy, but the long-term impact of these efforts still remains to be seen.

CONCLUSION

The backlash suggests that there are deep divisions in early twenty-first century Japanese society about state feminism, about what are perceived as appropriate roles for women and men, and about the state's involvement in encouraging or discouraging particular roles. But it must also be said that while the proponents of the backlash paint the government model of DKS as being equivalent to feminism, there are deep divisions within feminism on these questions as well.

Feminists themselves raised some of the following questions about DKS. Is the government promoting a particular way of living, heterosexual, married, with kids, both parents employed etc., at the cost of other ways of living? Is the government promoting freedom from sexual/gender difference or not, and is that a good thing or not? And in arguing back that the policy is about eliminating sexual discrimination, not eliminating sexual difference, are feminists guilty of homophobia? In other words, are they focusing on gender at the cost of ignoring attacks on sexuality (especially sexual minorities, the transgendered, the queer etc.)? In promoting the participation of women in wage labor, are feminists colluding with the government in capitulating to capital? Are feminists successful in performing the acrobatic balancing act?

And these, in the end, raise some of the largest and most fundamental questions about the ways in which we organize our society. What really is a fair and just way to support reproduction? Who should be in charge of reproductive labor such as housework and childcare? How should it be distributed? What is the role of the state in supporting this labor and in managing its distribution? Should the state mandate one model of distribution of labor over another? Should feminists argue for the protection of the family or for the deconstruction of the family, for the equal treatment of women and men, or for the dissolution of any kind of difference between women and men?

Thus the debate continues.

Footnotes

1 The Basic Law for a Gender-equal Society (Law No. 78 of 1999). English translation available at http://www.gender.go.jp/english_contents/basic_law/index.html (accessed 11 March 2010).

3 Higuchi Reference Higuchi Keiko2003, pp. 73–76. For background on the “protection versus equality” debate in the Japanese women's labor movement, see Molony Reference Molony and Hunter1993.

4 See Gelb Reference Gelb1991; Knapp Reference Knapp1999. But see also Gelb Reference Gelb2000 for an updated view of the EEOL.

6 See Stetson and Mazur Reference Stetson and Mazur1995 for the concept of state feminism. Interestingly, though Stetson and Mazur chose to examine state feminism in “advanced industrial societies with stable democratic political systems” (p. 13) Japan is not included in their comparative volume.

8 Itō Reference Itō Kimio2002, pp. 42–44.

9 See Asai Reference Asai Haruo2003, Kimura Reference Kimura Ryōko2005. For an overview of gendered education in postwar Japan up to the late 1980s, see Buckley Reference Buckley and Gordon1993, pp. 359–65.

10 Initially, the government toyed with another unusual term danjo kyōsei 男女共生 (male–female co-living) but this term was eventually rejected. Itō Reference Itō Kimio2002: pp. 42–43.

11 Ōsawa Reference Ōsawa and Ueno Chizuko2001, p. 17. Ōsawa also notes that “sanka” conjures up the image of women being mobilized by the state into participating, an image that “sankaku” sought to dispel, though in more recent years, “sankaku” has come to carry some of the same connotations due to the ways in which the initiative has appeared to come from the top down.

12 See Satō Reference Satō Yōko2001, pp. 89–90, for a discussion of Tokyo's Basic Ordinance for Male–Female Equal Participation 男女平等参画基本条例 (Danjo byōdō sankaku kihon jōrei). Satō considers the inclusion of byōdō in the title a positive achievement.

13 A “gender-equal society” is defined in the Basic Law as a “society in which both men and women, as equal members, have the opportunity to participate in all kinds of social activities at will, equally enjoy political, economic, and cultural benefits, and share responsibilities.”

16 For another early example, see the feminist journal Agora 204 (February 1995), where the journalist Fukao Tokiko uses “gender free” to refer to language that is free of gender bias, such as the term “parenthood” instead of “motherhood.”

17 The New Party Sakigake (Shintō Sakigake 新党さきがけ) led by Dōmoto Akiko 堂本暁子, and the Social Democratic Party (Shakai Minshu tō 社会民主党) led by Doi Takako 土井たか子. See Ōsawa et al. Reference Ōsawa and Takemura Kazuko2003, pp. 143–44.

21 Murase Reference Murase2006, p. 109. Murase also points out that this access by the IWY Liaison Group came at the expense of grassroots groups, which were excluded from the policy-making process.

22 See Gelb Reference Gelb, David and Robert2002 for the effect of CEDAW on EEOL.

23 Higuchi Reference Higuchi Keiko2003, pp. 81–83.

27 Kanda et al. Reference Kanda Michiko1992, pp. 71–96.

28 For an overview, see Mackie Reference Mackie2003.

31 Footnote Ibid., pp. 22–25.

32 Footnote Ibid., p. 26.

33 Footnote Ibid., pp. 28–29. It has to be noted, however, that the 1996 Vision was more progressive than what eventually became the Basic Law, which through its preamble put gender equality in the context of solving Japan's demographic challenges, rather than in the context of human rights. See Nakajima Reference Nakajima2000.

34 On the concept of “femocrats” see Eisenstein Reference Eisenstein1995, Makihara Reference Makihara Izuru and Tsujimura Miyoko2008.

35 Especially striking in this discursive context was the January 2009 airing of a three-part NHK special titled “Onna to otoko: Saishin kagaku ga yomitoku sei” 女と男: 最新科学が読み解く性 (‘Woman and man: sex decoded through cutting-edge science’), with the second segment focusing on research into sex and gender differences in medical, educational, and business settings. The program concluded that there were undeniable biological differences between women and men, suggested that these developed via early human adaptation to environmental challenges (men went hunting so became better at spatial recognition; women had to remember and communicate good foraging sites so became better at linguistic communication etc.). While the program stressed that these differences in ability do not mean that women and men cannot strive for the same goals, just that they might best use different strategies to achieve the same goals, in the context of the controversy over sexual difference in relation to state gender policy, it is striking that NHK should produce and air this program at just this time. http://www.nhk.or.jp/special/onair/090112.html (accessed 11 March 2010).

36 Gelb Reference Gelb2004, p. 5.

38 Murase Reference Murase2006, p. 108.

39 Satō Reference Satō Yōko2001 pp. 87–88.

40 Footnote Ibid., p. 87.

41 Buckley Reference Buckley1997, pp. 245–71 for a profile of Saitō Chiyo, founding editor of Agora.

42 Agora 241 (July 1998).

44 Hotta Reference Hotta Midori2002, pp. 106–10.

49 On the changes in the modern family, see Ueno Reference Ueno Chizuko1994/2009.

50 See www.nipponkaigi.org, accessed 29 June 2010.

52 See, for example, Yamashita Reference Yamashita Etsuko1988a.

53 Yamashita Reference Yamashita Etsuko1988b, Yamashita Reference Yamashita Etsuko1991. See Kano 2005 for a critique of Yamashita.

55 Hayashi Reference Hayashi Michiyoshi1998, Hayashi Reference Hayashi Michiyoshi1999. See also Yoda Reference Yoda2000 for a critical analysis of this kind of discourse of paternalism.

56 Such as novelist and Tokyo governor Ishihara Shintarō 石原慎太郎, novelist Sono Ayako 曾野綾子, critics Watanabe Shōichi 渡辺昇一 and Hasegawa Michiko 長谷川三千子.

57 Such as Hayashi Michiyoshi, Yagi Hidetsugu 八木秀次, Takahashi Shirō 高橋史朗.

58 For example Yamatani Eriko 山谷えり子 and Abe Shinzō 安倍晋三 further discussed below.

59 Such as the Association of Shinto Shrines (Jinja honchō 神社本庁), Seichō no ie 生長の家, the Unification Church (Tōitsu kyōkai 統一教会) and the related International Federation for Victory over Communism (Kokusai shōkyō rengō 国際勝共連合).

61 Takenobu Reference Takenobu Mieko and Ryōko2005, pp. 22–23.

62 Satō Reference Satō Fumika2006, p. 213.

64 The Second Basic Plan can be downloaded from http://www.gender.go.jp/kihon-keikaku/2nd/honbun.html, accessed 19 August 2010.

68 See Koyama and Ogiue Reference Koyama, Chiki Ogiue and Ueno Chizuko2006 for more detail.

69 Ōsawa Reference Ōsawa2002, p. 57.

70 English language summary of the report available from http://www.scj.go.jp/ja/info/iinkai/gender/index.html (accessed 11 March 2010).

73 See their web articles on http://webfemi.net (accessed 6 December 2010).

74 Nihon Josei Gakkai Reference Nihon Josei Gakkai Jendā Kenkyūkai2006. Some local municipalities and centers have overcompensated in the direction of avoiding the term “gender” altogether – a move criticized by feminists but in keeping with the backlash claim that biological sexual difference is fundamentally unchanging and unchangeable. This essentialist argument would make the concept of “gender” as differentiated from “sex” unnecessary.

75 Some scholars have argued that the use of the term “gender” in certain academic feminist contexts had precisely this expansive definition in mind, rather than the narrower definition of “social and cultural differences between men and women.” See Kano Reference Kano2003.

77 Note however, the “Queering the Backlash” symposium organized by the Women's Studies Association of Japan (Nihon Josei Gakkai) 22 December 2007.

78 Ueno Reference Ueno Chizuko and Beverly Yamamoto1998, translated by Beverly Yamamoto as Nationalism and Gender (Melbourne: TransPacific Press, Reference Ueno Chizuko and Beverly Yamamoto2004) gives an overview of the debate surrounding the scholarly discourse on women as collaborator versus women as victim of the militarist regime.

82 Kaizuma 2004, pp. 156–57.

84 Stetson and Mazur Reference Stetson and Mazur1995, pp. 287–91.

References

REFERENCES

Asai 2003 Asai Haruo, 浅井春夫, et al. , ed. Jendā furī/sei kyōiku basshingu: Koko ga shiritai 50 no Q&A ジェンダーフリー 性教育バッシング ここが知りたい50の Q&A (“Bashing against gender free and sex education: Fifty questions and answers”). Tokyo: Ōtsuki Shoten, 2003.Google Scholar
Asano 2006 Asano Fumie, 浅野富美枝. “‘Bakkurasshu’ no jidai” 「バックラッシュ」の時代 (“The age of backlash”). In Jendā gainen ga hiraku shikai: Bakkurasshu o koete ジェンダー概念がひらく視界: バックラッシュを超えて (“The perspective opened by the concept of gender: Overcoming the backlash”), ed. Yuibutsuron, Kenkyū Kyōkai 唯物論研究協会, pp. 266–86. Tokyo: Aoki Shoten, 2006.Google Scholar
Buckley 1993 Buckley, Sandra. “Altered States: The Body Politics of ‘Being-Woman’.” In Postwar Japan as History, ed. Gordon, , pp. 347–72. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993.Google Scholar
Buckley 1997 Buckley, Sandra. Broken Silence: Voices of Japanese Feminism. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chan-Tiberghien 2004 Chan-Tiberghien, Jennifer. Gender and Human Rights Politics in Japan: Global Norms and Domestic Networks. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eisenstein 1995 Eisenstein, Hester. Inside Agitators: Australian Femocrats and the State. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1995.Google Scholar
Garon 1997 Garon, Sheldon. Molding Japanese Minds: The State in Everyday Life. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1997.Google Scholar
Gelb 1991 Gelb, Joyce. “Tradition and Change in Japan: The Case of Equal Employment Opportunity Law.” U.S.-Japan Women's Journal, English supplement 1 (1991), pp. 4875.Google Scholar
Gelb 2000 Gelb, Joyce. “The Equal Employment Opportunity Law: A Decade of Change for Japanese Women?Law & Policy 22:3/4 (October 2000), pp. 385407.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gelb 2002 Gelb, Joyce. “Feminism, NGO's, and the Impact of the New Transnationalisms.” In Dynamics of Regulatory Change: How Globalization Affects National Regulatory Policies, ed. David, Vogel and Robert, Kagan, pp. 132. University of California Press, 2002. http://repositories.cdlib.org/uciaspubs/editedvolumes/1/9.Google Scholar
Gelb 2003 Gelb, Joyce. Gender Policies in Japan and the United States: Comparing Women's Movements, Rights and Politics. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gelb 2004 Gelb, Joyce. “The Politics of Backlash in Japan.” Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Chicago, 2 September 2004. http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p60588_index.html. Viewed 10 May 2009.Google Scholar
Gelb 2006 Gelb, Joyce. “Backlash in the US and Japan.” Paper presented at the IPSA roundtable on “Women's Movements Worldwide: Flourishing or in Abeyance?,” organized by the International Political Science Association, Fukuoka, 9 July 2006. http://ipsa-rc19.anu.edu.au/Gelb.ipsa06.pdf. Accessed 10 May 2009.Google Scholar
Hane 1988 Hane, Mikiso, ed. Reflections on the Way to the Gallows: Voices of Japanese Rebel Women. New York: Pantheon, 1988.Google Scholar
Hayashi 1996 Hayashi Michiyoshi, 林道義. Fusei no fukken 父性の復権 (“Restoring fatherhood”). Tokyo: Chūkō Shinsho, 1996.Google Scholar
Hayashi 1998 Hayashi Michiyoshi, 林道義. Shufu no fukken 主婦の復権 (“Restoring the housewife”). Tokyo: Kōdansha, 1998.Google Scholar
Hayashi 1999 Hayashi Michiyoshi, 林道義. Feminizumu no gaidoku フェミニズムの害毒 (“The poison of feminism”). Tokyo: Sōshisha, 1999.Google Scholar
Higuchi 2003 Higuchi Keiko, 樋口恵子. “Josei seisaku no tōtatsuten to korekara no josei sentā” 女性政策の到達点とこれからの女性センター (“The current status of women's policy and the future of women's centers”). Josei shisetsu jānaru 女性施設ジャーナル 8 (2003), pp. 66105.Google Scholar
Hosoya 2005 Hosoya Makoto, 細谷実. “Danjo byōdōka ni taisuru kinnen no handō wa naze okiru no ka?” 男女平等化に対する近年の反動はなぜ起きるのか? (“Why does the recent reaction against equality of men and women happen?”). Sekai 738 (April 2005), pp. 96105.Google Scholar
Hotta 2002 Hotta Midori, 堀田碧. “Danjo kyōdō sankakuteki akurobatto” 男女共同参画的アクロバット (“Male–female co-participatory acrobatics”). Impaction 131 (2002), pp. 106–10.Google Scholar
Houston 1994 Houston, Barbara. “Should Public Education Be Gender Free?” In The Education Feminism Reader, ed. Stone, Lynda, pp. 122–34. New York: Routledge, 1994.Google Scholar
Houston 2006 Houston, Barbara. “‘Jendā furī’ gainen ni kansuru komento” ジェンダーフリー概念に関するコメント (“Comments on the concept ‘gender free’”). In Bakkurasshu!: Naze jendā furī wa tatakareta no ka? バックラッシュ!: なぜジェンダーフリーは叩かれたのか? (“Backlash! Why was gender-free bashed?”), ed. Chizuko, Ueno 上野千鶴子 et al. , pp. 241–42. Tokyo: Sōfūsha, 2006.Google Scholar
Itō 2002 Itō Kimio, 伊藤公雄. “‘Danjo kyōdō sankaku’ o megutte, ima, nani ga towarete iru no ka” 男女共同参画をめぐって、今、何が問われているのか (“What, now, is being questioned concerning ‘male–female co-participation’?”) Impaction 131 (2002), pp. 3851.Google Scholar
Kaizuma 2004 Kaizuma Keiko 海妻径子. “‘Otoko dewanai mono’ no haijo to teikō: Dansei shi ga ‘undō’ ni toikakeru mono” <男ではない者>の排除と抵抗: 男性史が<運動>に問いかけるもの (“The exclusion and resistance of ‘those who are not men’: What men's history calls into question about ‘activism’”). Jōkyō (2004), pp. 150–57.Google Scholar
Kanai 1998 Kanai Yoshiko, 金井淑子. “‘Danjo kyōdō sankaku gata shakai o mezashite’: Pekin, bijon, 2000 nen puran, arata na kachi no sōzō e” 「男女共同参画型社会をめざして」: 北京 ビジョン プラン、新たな価値の創造へ. (“Towards a male–female co-participation society: Peking, Vision, 2000 Plan, and towards the creation of ‘new values’”). URC Toshi kagaku 35 (1998), pp. 716.Google Scholar
Kanai 2005 Kanai Yoshiko, . “Jendā bakkurasshu no kōzu to naimen” ジェンダー バックラッシュの構造と内面 (“The structure and interiority of the gender backlash”). Ajia taiheiyō ni okeru jendā to heiwa gaku アジア太平洋におけるジェンダーと平和学 4 (2005), pp. 159–76.Google Scholar
Kanda 1992 Kanda Michiko, 神田道子, et al. “Joseigaku kenkyūsha to seiji jissen” 女性学研究者と政治実践 (“Women's studies researchers and political praxis”). Joseigaku kenkyū 2 (1992), pp. 7196.Google Scholar
Kano 2002 Kano, Ayako 加野彩子. “Nihon no 1970 nendai-90 nendai feminizumu” (“Japanese Feminism in the 1970s–1990s”) 日本の1970年代–1990年代フェミニズム. In Feminizumu no meicho 50 フェミニズムの名著50 (“Fifty feminist masterpieces”), ed. Yumiko, Ehara and Yoshiko, Kanai, pp. 501–18. Tokyo: Heibonsha, 2002.Google Scholar
Kano 2003 Kano, Ayako. “Women? Art? Gender? Chino Kaori and the Feminist Art History Debates.” Review of Japanese Culture and Society 15 (December 2003), pp. 2538.Google Scholar
Kano 2005 Kano, Ayako. “Towards a Critique of Transhistorical Femininity.” In Gendering Modern Japanese History, eds. Molony, Barbara and Uno, Kathleen, pp. 520–54. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2005.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kimura 2005 Kimura Ryōko, 木村涼子, ed. Jendā furī toraburu: Basshingu genshō o kenshō suru ジェンダー フリー トラブル: バッシング現象を検証する (“Gender free trouble: Examining the bashing phenomenon”). Tokyo: Hakutakusha; Gendai Shokan, 2005.Google Scholar
Knapp 1999 Knapp, Kiyoko Kamio. “Don't Awaken the Sleeping Child: Japan's Gender Equality Law and the Rhetoric of Gradualism.” Columbia Journal of Gender and Law 8:2 (1999), pp. 143–95.Google Scholar
Koyama and Ogiue 2006 Koyama, Emi 小山エミ and Chiki Ogiue, 荻上チキ. “Koko ga yoku deru!: Nanatsu no ronten” ここがよく出る!七つの論点 (“These come up often! Seven points of contention”). In Bakkurasshu!: Naze jendā furī wa tatakareta no ka? バックラッシュ! なぜジェンダーフリーは叩かれたのか? (“Backlash! Why was gender-free bashed?”), ed. Ueno Chizuko, 上野千鶴子 et al. , pp. 371–75. Tokyo: Sōfūsha, 2006.Google Scholar
LeBlanc 1999 LeBlanc, Robin M. Bicycle Citizens: The Political World of the Japanese Housewife. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mackie 2003 Mackie, Vera. Feminism in Modern Japan: Citizenship, Embodiment and Sexuality. Berkeley: Cambridge University Press, 2003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Makihara 2008 Makihara Izuru, 牧原出. “Nihon no danjo kyōdō sankaku no soshiki hensei e no teigen: ‘Femokurato sutoratejī’ no shiten kara” 日本の男女共同参画の組織編成への提言: 「フェモクラット・ストラテジー」の視点から (“Proposal for structuring the organization of Japan's male–female co-participation: From the viewpoint of ‘femocrat strategy’”). In Danjo kyōdō sankaku no tame ni: Seisaku teigen 男女共同参画のために:政策提言 (“Towards male–female co-participation: Policy proposals”), ed. Tsujimura Miyoko, 辻村みよ子 et al. , pp. 8795. Sendai: Tōhoku Daigaku Shuppankai, 2008.Google Scholar
Miyadai 2006 Miyadai Shinji, 宮台真司. “Nejireta shakai no genjō to mezasu beki daisan no michi: Bakkurasshu to dō mukiaeba ii no ka” ねじれた社会の現状と目指すべき第三の道: バックラッシュとどう向き合えばいいのか (“The twisted present condition of society and looking for the third way: How to face the backlash”). In Bakkurasshu!: Naze jendā furī wa tatakareta no ka? バックラッシュ! なぜジェンダーフリーは叩かれたのか? (“Backlash! Why was gender-free bashed?”), ed. Ueno Chizuko, 上野千鶴子 et al. , pp. 1099. Tokyo: Sōfūsha 2006.Google Scholar
Molony 1993 Molony, Barbara. “Equality Versus Difference: The Japanese Debate over ‘Motherhood Protection’, 1915–50.” In Japanese Women Working, ed. Hunter, Janet, pp. 122–48. London: Routledge, 1993.Google Scholar
Murase 2006 Murase, Miriam. Cooperation over Conflict: The Women's Movement and the State in Postwar Japan. New York: Routledge, 2006.Google Scholar
Nakajima 2000 Nakajima, Michiko. “The Problem of the Basic Law on the Cooperative Participation of Men and Women in Society.” Women's Asia: Voices from Japan 6 (Autumn 2000), pp. 812.Google Scholar
Nihon Josei Gakkai Jendā Kenkyūkai 2006 Nihon Josei Gakkai Jendā Kenkyūkai, 日本女性学会ジェンダー研究会 ed. Q&A danjo kyōdō sankaku/jendā furī basshingu: Bakkurasshu e no tettei hanron Q&A 男女共同参画/ジェンダーフリー・バッシング:バックラッシュへの徹底反論 (“Questions and answers about male–female co-participation and gender free bashing: Thorough arguments against the backlash”). Tokyo: Akashi Shoten, 2006.Google Scholar
Ogiue 2006 Ogiue Chiki, 荻上チキ. “Seiken yotō no bakkurasshu” 政権与党のバックラッシュ (“The backlash of the ruling party”). In Bakkurasshu!: Naze jendā furī wa tatakareta no ka? バックラッシュ! なぜジェンダーフリーは叩かれたのか? (“Backlash! Why was gender-free bashed?”), ed. Ueno Chizuko, 上野千鶴子 et al. , pp. 357–70. Tokyo: Sōfūsha 2006.Google Scholar
Ōsawa 1996 Ōsawa, Mari 大澤真理. “‘Danjo kyōdō sankaku bijon’ no tokuchō to igi” 「男女共同参画ビジョン」の特徴と意義 (“The characteristics and significance of the ‘male–female co-participation vision’”). Josei to rōdō 21:18 (1996), pp. 638.Google Scholar
Ōsawa 2000 Ōsawa, Mari. “Government Approaches to Gender Equality in the Mid-1990s.” Social Science Japan Journal 3:1 (2000), pp. 319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ōsawa 2001 Ōsawa, Mari 大澤真理, interview with Ueno Chizuko. “Danjo kyōdō sankaku shakai kihon hō no mezasu mono: Sakutei made no ura omote” 男女共同参画社会基本法のめざすもの: 策定までのウラオモテ (“The aims of the basic law for male–female co-participation society: The ins and outs of its passage”). In Radikaru ni katareba … ラディカルに語れば … (“Radically speaking …”), ed. Ueno Chizuko, 上野千鶴子, pp. 977. Tokyo: Heibonsha, 2001.Google Scholar
Ōsawa 2002 Ōsawa, Mari 大澤真理. Danjo kyōdō sankaku shakai o tsukuru 男女共同参画社会をつくる (“Making a male–female co-participation society”). Tokyo: NHK Books, 2002.Google Scholar
Ōsawa 2003 Ōsawa, Mari 大澤真理 et al. “Danjo sankaku no kōbō” 男女共同参画の攻防” (“The battle over male–female participation”). In “Posuto” Feminizumu “ポスト”フェミニズム, ed. Takemura Kazuko, 竹村和子, pp. 142–56. Tokyo: Sakuhinsha, 2003.Google Scholar
Sasaki 2001 Sasaki Yōko, 佐々木陽子. Sōryokusen to josei heishi 総力戦と女性兵士 (“Total war and women soldiers”). Tokyo: Seikyūsha, 2001.Google Scholar
Satō 2001 Satō Yōko, 佐藤洋子. “Pinchi wa chansu!: Gyakufū no naka no josei sentā” ピンチはチャンス!: 逆風の中の女性センター (“A pinch is a chance!: Women's centers amidst unfavorable winds”). Josei shisetsu jānaru 6 (2001), pp. 86117.Google Scholar
Satō 2006 Satō Fumika, 佐藤文香. “Feminizumu ni iradatsu ‘anata’ e: ‘Ikari’ wa doko e mukau beki nano ka” フェミニズムに苛立つ「あなた」へ: 「怒り」はどこへ向うべきなのか (“To ‘you’ irritated by feminism: Where your ‘anger’ should be directed”). Ronza (2006), pp. 212–17.Google Scholar
Schoppa 2006 Schoppa, Leonard, . Race for the Exits: The Unraveling of Japan's System of Social Protection. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2006.Google Scholar
Stetson and Mazur 1995 Stetson, Dorothy McBride and Mazur, Ann, eds. Comparative State Feminism. London: Sage, 1995.Google Scholar
Takenobu 2005 Takenobu Mieko, 竹信三恵子. “Yappari kowai?: Jendā furī basshingu” やっぱりこわい?: ジェンダー フリー バッシング (“Still scary?: Gender-free bashing”). In Jendā furī toraburu: Basshingu genshō o kenshō suru (“Gender-free trouble: Examining the bashing phenomenon”), ed. Ryōko, Kimura, pp. 1934. Tokyo: Hakutakusha; Gendai Shokan, 2005.Google Scholar
Ueno 1994/2009 Ueno Chizuko, 上野千鶴子. Kindai kazoku no seiritsu to shūen 近代家族の成立と終焉. Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 1994. Translated as The Modern Family in Japan: Its Rise and Fall. Melbourne: Trans Pacific Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Ueno 1998/2004 Ueno Chizuko, 上野千鶴子. Nashonarizumu to Jendā ナショナリズムとジェンダー (“Nationalism and gender”). Seidosha, 1998. Translated as Nationalism and Gender by Beverly Yamamoto, . Melbourne: Trans Pacific Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Ueno 2006 Ueno Chizuko, 上野千鶴子 et al. ed. Bakkurasshu!: Naze jendā furī wa tatakareta no ka? バックラッシュ! なぜジェンダーフリーは叩かれたのか? (“Backlash! Why was gender-free bashed?”). Tokyo: Sōfūsha, 2006.Google Scholar
Wakakuwa 2006 Wakakuwa Midori, 若桑みどり et al. , ed. “Jendā” no kiki o koeru!: Tettei tōron! Bakkurasshu 「ジェンダー」の危機を超える!: 徹底討論!バックラッシュ (“Overcoming the crisis of “gender”!: Thorough debates on the backlash”). Tokyo: Seikyūsha, 2006.Google Scholar
Yamaguchi 1992 Yamaguchi Mitsuko, 山口みつ子. “Josei sho dantai no josei seisaku ni taisuru gōi keisei katei: Zenkoku soshiki 50 dantai no rentai to kōdō” 女性諸団体の女性政策に対する合意形成過程: 全国組織50団体の連帯と行動 (“Women's groups' consensus formation process towards women's policies: The alliances and actions of 50 national organizations”). Joseigaku kenkyū 2 (1992), pp. 5370.Google Scholar
Yamaguchi 2006 Yamaguchi Tomomi, 山口智美. “‘Jendā furī’ ronsō to feminizumu undō no ushinawareta jūnen” 「ジェンダー フリー」論争とフェミニズム運動の失われた10年 (“The ‘gender free’ debates and the feminist movement's lost decade”). In Bakkurasshu!: Naze jendā furī wa tatakareta no ka? バックラッシュ! なぜジェンダーフリーは叩かれたのか? (“Backlash! Why was gender-free bashed?”), ed. Ueno Chizuko, 上野千鶴子 et al. , pp. 244–82. Tokyo: Sōfūsha, 2006.Google Scholar
Yamashita 1988a Yamashita Etsuko, 山下悦子. Takamure Itsue ron: “Haha” no arukeorojī 高群逸枝論: 「母」のアルケオロジー (“On Takamure Itsue: Archaeology of the ‘mother’”). Tokyo: Kawade Shobō Shinsha, 1988.Google Scholar
Yamashita 1988b Yamashita Etsuko, 山下悦子. Nihon josei kaihō shisō no kigen: Posuto feminizumu shiron 日本女性解放思想の起源: ポスト フェミニズム試論 (“The origins of Japanese women's liberation ideology: Towards post-feminism”). Tokyo: Kaimeisha, 1988.Google Scholar
Yamashita 1991 Yamashita Etsuko, 山下悦子. “Josei no jidai to iu shinwa: Ueno Chizuko wa onna o sukueru ka 「女性の時代」という神話: 上野千鶴子は女を救えるか” (“The myth of the ‘woman's era’: Can Ueno Chizuko save women?”). Tokyo: Seikyusha, 1991.Google Scholar
Yoda 2000 Yoda, Tomiko. “The Rise and Fall of Maternal Society: Gender, Labor, and Capital in Contemporary Japan.” The South Atlantic Quarterly 99:4 (Fall 2000), pp. 865902.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yuibutsuron Kenkyū Kyōkai 2006 Yuibutsuron Kenkyū Kyōkai, 唯物論研究会, ed. Jendā gainen ga hiraku shikai: Bakkurasshu o koete ジェンダー概念がひらく視界: バックラッシュを超えて (“The perspective opened by the concept of gender: Overcoming the backlash”). Tokyo: Aoki Shoten, 2006.Google Scholar