This book is a welcome addition to the growing collection of studies of Japanese women. By relying on detailed presentations of real women in their everyday context introduced in real-life situations, Itoh challenges readers never to generalize about any typical individual fulfilling a social role. . . . Recommended.
Choice Reviews
This book offers one of the finest ways to understand the sociological and anthropological conditions of current Japan. The Japanese women’s voices are spicy and sharp, while the translation reads as pleasantly and persuasively as the original. This provocative work will interest general readers as well as students in sociology, anthropology, and cultural studies courses.
- Seiichi Makino, Princeton University,
Thanks to Adachi and Stanlaw, readers of English can now relish Masako Itoh’s popular nonfiction book. Itoh’s vignettes and essays explore the politics of gender in contemporary Japan through an illuminating blend of her own thinking intertwined with the words and expressions of everyday women. This delightful translation with its expert cultural commentary skillfully captures the opinionated, outspoken, and provocative rants and worries of Itoh and her companions.
- Laura Miller, Loyola University Chicago,
This approachable and absorbing book offers a unique window into Japanese culture and language. Highlighting the overlooked world of the "silent majority," the housewives and mothers who are the mainstay of Japanese society, this work tells the stories of ordinary women in their own voices. An annotated translation of a Japanese bestseller, the volume explores the daily communication of Japanese women and what their words tell us about their relationships and lives in a globalized, post-industrial, yet still often male-dominated Japan.
Readers will find that many issues explored here are universal to women everywhere, while others are specific to Japan. With added cultural context and commentary, the book offers a fresh understanding of Japanese society, even for those who have had little exposure to Japan. Students in diverse fields, ranging from anthropology to women's studies and from communications to Asian studies, will find this an insightful and provocative work.
Chapter 1: Marriage and Tradition
Chapter 2: Men
Chapter 3: Ourselves
Chapter 4: Other Women
Chapter 5: Families, Parents, and Parents-in-Law
Chapter 6: Life and Society
Chapter 7: Women's Social Roles and Our Behavior in Men's Society
Chapter 8: Social Attitudes toward Women
Chapter 9: How We Are Seen
Chapter 10: What I Want to Be
Chapter 11: How Society Should Be
Chapter 12: Married Life
Chapter 13: Social Issues
Chapter 14: Nature and Beauty
Introducing compelling and rarely heard voices, this sub-series centers on biography, autobiography, memoir, and reportage by and about Asian and Pacific peoples. Readers find contemporary women and men, ethnic minorities, farmers and fisherfolk, workers, migrants, the new rich and the dispossessed, writers, artists, intellectuals, politicians and prophets, iconoclasts, and activists. These are individuals who are shaping and/or resisting the outcomes of intense social change--local, regional, and global. The humanity and diversity of these distinctive voices and experiences will appeal to students and scholars with interests ranging from area studies to gender, the environment, human rights, and social movements.
Series Editor: Mark Selden