Izvorni znanstveni članak
https://doi.org/10.32728/flux.2025.7.4
Unveiling the New Era: The Transformation of Women’s Roles and Status during the Meiji Japan
Stefani Silli
orcid.org/0009-0007-8250-127X
; Juraj Dobrila University of Pula / University of Ljubljana
*
* Dopisni autor.
Sažetak
In the second half of the 19th century Japan saw the end of the feudal political order with the Tokugawa shogunate in power (1603–1867) and the restoration of imperial rule under Emperor Meiji, ushering Japan into a new modern era. This paper aims to investigate and illuminate how the combined impact of modern education, legal forms, and economic opportunities influenced the transformation of women’s status and roles in the Meiji period, using a comparative approach with the previous Edo (Tokugawa) period. This paper argues that traditional Confucian-based gender norms that had dominated during the Edo period were challenged and, in some cases, reshaped to fit the evolving socio-political landscape. The establishment of a modern educational system enabled girls and women to acquire new knowledge and skills outside the domestic sphere, laying the groundwork for women’s increased participation in public, political and professional life. However, as the freedom and popular rights movement came to be perceived as a threat to state authority, by the late 1890s women were deliberately excluded from formal politics and redefined primarily as wives and mothers serving the state in the household, as women's activism challenged both political hierarchy and the family system ie.
Ključne riječi
women's rights, Meiji Japan (1870s–1890s), women's political participation; ryōsai kenbo ideology; Japanese feminism; Fukuda Hideko; women’s history
Hrčak ID:
343321
URI
Datum izdavanja:
15.1.2026.
Posjeta: 454 *