WOMEN
Ichikawa Fusae: The First Woman of Japanese Politics
In an age when women had few rights, Ichikawa Fusae fought for hers - and used her hard won career to give…
Page 19
Japan's gender gap doesn't show up only in abstract rankings. It plays out in courtrooms, police stations, crowded trains, and workplaces. This hub covers the legal, political, and social forces that shape women's lives in Japan: legislation that expands or restricts their choices, institutions that protect or fail them, and the cultural pressures that push against change.
Most English-language coverage of women in Japan leans on familiar contrasts (the modern woman versus tradition, career versus family) and sources them from government reports or foreign think-tank data. We go to Japanese feminist organizations, legal scholars, and women speaking in their own words, often through Japanese-language social media, court documents, and reporting that never makes it into English.
We have several strong beats in this area. The stalking crisis (and the pattern of police inaction that has left women dead) is one of the most urgent. So is the question of bodily autonomy: courts have blocked women from accessing sterilization surgery, while the morning-after pill took three years of bureaucratic friction to reach pharmacy shelves.
Workplace and public-space harassment appear repeatedly, alongside the courts and institutions that frequently decline to treat them as serious harms. And underneath all of it runs the pressure around marriage, motherhood, and reproductive choice - a pressure that Japanese women are increasingly naming, debating, and refusing.
WOMEN
In an age when women had few rights, Ichikawa Fusae fought for hers - and used her hard won career to give…
WOMEN
Born in an era in Japan when women's rights were more oppressed than ever, Kimura Komako never gave up the fight -…
WOMEN
From defending castles to outraging society, Yamamoto Yae never met a battle she didn't pick. Alyssa Fusek on one of Japan's most…
WOMEN
How a grieving widow came to write two classics of world literature: a sprawling novel, and an 11th-century Twitter account.
FEATURED
Is anime "The New Orientalism"? How a Twitter controversy over Kizuna Ai had Japanese women questioning how the media depicts them.