1st Edition

Beyond Common Sense: Sexuality And Gender In Contemporary Japan

By Lunsing Copyright 2001
    420 Pages
    by Routledge

    420 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 2001. This volume is based on the author's visit to Japan in Summer 1986 on his findings about some of the questions he was asked whilst there. He was 25 and these questions centred around asking if he was married or had a girlfriend, when in his homeland of the Netherlands he openly identified as gay. This research is an investigation of how gay and lesbian people, women's and men's liberationaists, singles and other people, such as transsexuals, transvestites and hermaphrodites, whose ideas, feelings or lifestyles are at variance with Japanese constructions of marriage and inherently the construction of life, live in Japan.

    Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 Methods and Ethics; Chapter 3 Discourses and Politics of Marriage; Chapter 4 Trying to Fit: Homosexuality and Feminism in Marriage; Chapter 5 Private: Alternative Lifestyles; Chapter 6 Dealing with Society: Practical Problems, Passing and Coming Out; Chapter 7 Circles: Discussing Gender, Sex, and the Other and the Self; Chapter 8 Conclusion;

    Biography

    The Author Wim Marinus Lunsing received his PhD in Social Anthropology from Oxford Brookes University and has been Research Fellow at Tokyo University.