Gyaru Girl Segregated by School Over Her Hair Color

Gyaru Girl Segregated by School Over Her Hair Color

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Gyaru model and school
Pictures: ADYoshi / PIXTA(ใƒ”ใ‚ฏใ‚นใ‚ฟ); OrangeMoon / PIXTA(ใƒ”ใ‚ฏใ‚นใ‚ฟ)
A young gyaru fashion model is struggling to balance work and school - and her school's policies are making it harder.

School can be tough even if society designates you as “normal”. For minorities or even those with special interests, it can quickly become hell. One girl is finding that out the hard way as she and her parents attempt to balance her life as a fashion model against her school’s strict style regulations.

Draconian regulations

Japanese schools have come under increasing fire in recent years for regulations that parents say are heavy-handed. One of the more bizarre examples was the revelation that some schools forbid students from wearing undergarments during gym class. In one case, school officials told a parent her daughter could wear a bra…if an employee confirmed her breasts had “developed enough”.

Many more schools have strict regulations around hair color. This has caused many students with diverse ethnic backgrounds to suffer discrimination. Book reviewer Nishida Ai, whose parents are Japanese and American, has talked about the shock and sense of discrimination she felt when her school’s yearbook died her brown hair black.

While hair color regulations are controversial, many teachers and officials continue to defend them. The argument is that consistency of appearance – through school uniforms and other dress code regulations – helps foster a sense of equality. School uniforms, for example, can take fashion out of the equation and cover income disparities between families.

Her own classroom, her own teacher

That brings us to the unique case of 13-year-old fashion model Juna. Juna dresses in gyaru fashion, a rebellious style that had its peak in the 1990s and is marked by tanned faces, bright makeup, and colored hair.

While nowhere near its previous popularity, gyaru still survives as a fashion subculture. Magazines such as egg and Ane Ageha help keep the culture alive.

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Juna is an exclusive model for egg. She also has a popular Instagram account with over 60,000 followers. Her schedule keeps her so busy, she tells Bunshun Online, that she often doesn’t have time to attend school in person. A recent work stint, for example, kept her on the road for two weeks straight[1].

Unfortunately, when Juna can attend school on her days off, it’s not a great experience.

Juna’s school is one of the many with strict regulations on hair color. School officials designate her purple hair as a violation of school regulations. As such, she’s not allowed to attend classes with her peers. Instead, she has to attend a special classroom by herself, where she receives instruction from a dedicated teacher. She only gets to see and interact with her classmates before and after school. And she can’t participate in any group activities, such as music or gym.

Sadly, it’s been like this for a while. Bunshun’s latest article is a follow-up piece from an interview they did with her a year ago. Since then, the school has relaxed the regulations a touch. Juna can now enter the school grounds with her classmates and doesn’t have to use a separate entrance as she did before.

Fighting for change – but not an exception

Picture: OrangeMoonย / PIXTA(ใƒ”ใ‚ฏใ‚นใ‚ฟ)

Juna’s father, 30, says the family has tried various workarounds to allow Juna to participate in classes under existing regulations. Juna’s tried wearing wigs and using a temporary spray color. She says that the sprays were too shiny and faded quickly. As for the wigs, they simply made Juna stand out more.

Juna says they also tried the reverse tactic – only using a wig for her photo shoots. “With gyaru, you have to be flashy. I considered using a wig when I entered middle school, but I thought that’d made me stand out from the other models.”

Her father says he continues to talk with the school about rules changes. However, he emphasizes that he’s against Juna being some sort of exception.

Juna says she’s opposed to attending school online as well. That means the family has no choice but to continue appealing to the school to change its policies.

“The Blue Devil’s Arrived”

In the second part of Bunshun’s interview, Juna opens up about how hard it is to study in isolation. “I have to tackle homework alone and there’s a lot I can’t understand. My teacher helps me but I feel it’d be more enjoyable studying together with everyone.”

Juna also remarks on how some students tease her over her hairstyle. “One of my sempais said at the school entrance, ‘The blue devil’s arrived’….It doesn’t bother me much but the next time someone says something I’m definitely hitting back.”

Some might argue that Juna brought this upon herself through her choice of profession. My own take is that Juna’s hair color is an expression of who she is. Her predicament is one shared by many in Japan whose hair color deviates from the “standard” black of a primarily ethnic Japanese student.

This reality is only going to get more complicated as time progresses. Schools in Japan will need to find a way to relax their regulations before this issue hits a cultural breaking point.

Japanese Schools Court Controversy with Draconian Hair Regulations

Sources

[1] ใ€ˆๅ…ƒๅฐๅญฆ็”Ÿใ‚ฎใƒฃใƒซใ€‰ใ€Œๅ…ฅๅญฆใ‹ใ‚‰ๅŠๅนด็ตŒใฃใฆใ‚‚ๆ•™ๅฎคใซๅ…ฅใ‚Œใชใ„ใ€ใ€Œ้ซช่‰ฒใฎๅ•้กŒใง้ ่ถณใ‚‚่พž้€€โ€ฆใ€ไธญๅญฆ็”Ÿใ‚ฎใƒฃใƒซใฎ็ˆถ่ฆช๏ผˆ30๏ผ‰ใŒใ€ๅญฆๆ กๅดใฎๅฏพๅฟœใซๆ€ใ†ใ“ใจ. Bunshun Online

[2] ใ€Œๅ…ˆ่ผฉใ‹ใ‚‰ใ€Ž้’้ฌผใŒใใŸใ€œใ€ใจ้ซช่‰ฒใ‚’ใ‹ใ‚‰ใ‹ใ‚ใ‚Œใฆโ€ฆใ€ไธญๅญฆ็”Ÿใ‚ฎใƒฃใƒซ๏ผˆ13๏ผ‰ใŒ่ชžใ‚‹ใ€โ€œๆ กๅ‰‡โ€ใจๅ‘จๅ›ฒใ‹ใ‚‰ใฎโ€œๅ่ฆ‹โ€ใ€ˆๅ…ƒๅฐๅญฆ็”Ÿใ‚ฎใƒฃใƒซใฎ็พๅœจใ€‰. Bunshun Online

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Jay Allen

Jay is a resident of Tokyo where he works as a reporter for Unseen Japan and as a technial writer. A lifelong geek, wordsmith, and language fanatic, he has level N1 certification in the Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT) and is fervently working on his Kanji Kentei Level 2 certification. You can follow Jay on Bluesky.

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