Synopses & Reviews
Women in postwar Japan have never felt completely free from the traditional concept of the housewife. Drawing on a unique ethnographic inquiry, Ofra Goldstein-Gidoni explores the complexities of the relationship between socially and culturally constructed roles bestowed on Japanese women and their real lives. With a novel approach to the use of the Internet and email in the production of ethnographic knowledge, this book gives voice to the lives and thoughts of "professional housewives."
Review
"A fascinating book about what it means and feels like to be a housewife in 2000s Japan . . . This is an imminently readable book that engages Japanese history, gender theory, and media studies to describe the options facing housewives in the contemporary moment. As omnipresent as housewives remain, this book shows us how varied and reflective they can be about their status, responsibilities, and degrees of satisfaction." - American Ethnologist
"An innovative attempt to trace the history and lived experience of Japanese "professional housewives." From popular media portrayals to 'housewife debates' and government propaganda tying women to domesticity even in the 2000s, Goldstein-Gidoni demonstrates the strength of the forces that propagate the housewife paradigm even as she reveals women's myriad responses to this lifestyle in the post-Bubble era. " - Glenda S. Roberts, professor and director of International Studies, Graduate School of Asia-Pacific Studies, Waseda University
"Goldstein-Gidoni gives voice to the lives and work of 'professional' housewives and to the vicissitudes of that especially salient category and status of Japanese women. Her work is a new and welcome addition to a long genealogy of the literature on Japanese housewives, and is the first, to my knowledge, to combine information about 'the professional housewife' with a reflexive interrogation of the process of ethnographic fieldwork. This book will greatly augment and update the body of scholarship on Japanese housewives and state formation from the perspective of domesticity." - Jennifer Robertson, professor of Anthropology and the History of Art, University of Michigan
Synopsis
Anthropological study of the social and cultural meanings of being a housewife and a woman in post-bubble Japan.
Synopsis
Drawing on a unique ethnographic inquiry, Ofra Goldstein-Gidoni explores the complexities of the relationship between socially and culturally constructed roles bestowed on Japanese women by a variety of state agents, including the market and the media, and the 'real' lives of these women.
About the Author
Ofra Goldstein-Gidoni is the chair of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Tel Aviv University, where she holds a joint position with the Department of East Asian Studies. She is the author of Packaged Japaneseness: Weddings, Business and Brides.
Table of Contents
Part I: A Collaborative Quest for Understanding 'Sengyo Shufu'Intertext I Entering the Field: Joining Mariko's Introspective Journey Intertext IIThe Postwar 'Professional Housewife' and the Japanese State Part II: The Women of Royal HeightsIntertext IIIOn 'Naturally' Becoming Housewives Intertext IV'Guarding the House': Men as Breadwinners, Women as Housewives Intertext VA New Housewife Is Born? Discourses of Class and Change in Royal Heights Part III: Housewives as Women in Post-Bubble JapanIntertext VIThe New Happy Housewife of Post-Bubble Japan Intertext VIIWrapping up: Housewives as the 'Winners'?Intertext VIII