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Mediating the good life: prostitution and the Japanese Woman's Christian Temperance Union, 1880s–1920s

journal contribution
posted on 2009-04-01, 00:00 authored by Bill Mihalopoulos
This article examines how the Japanese Woman's Christian Temperance Union, in the name of promoting liberty and rights of women in their relations with men, constructed hierarchies to ascribe value to themselves through moral condemnation. The JWCTU used extramarital sex as a political issue to strengthen the position of the legal wife in the household as opposed to the concubine and prostitute. Their efforts to prohibit Japanese women from going abroad as prostitutes, while understood as an attempt to end a system of slavery that violated the inherent rights of Japanese womanhood, was actually a desire to regulate the behaviour of the poor. The JWCTU based its moral reform agenda on the importance of premarital chastity, strict monogamy and the obligation to work for the good of the nation. Its construction of prostitution as evil represents an important strand in the history of the relationship between prostitution and family as a socio-political issue in modern Japan.

History

Journal

Gender & History

Volume

21

Issue

1

Pagination

19 - 38

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing

Location

London, England

ISSN

0953-5233

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, Blackwell Publishing

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