Why Are There No Spinsters in Japan?
- 1 December 1984
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Family History
- Vol. 9 (4) , 326-339
- https://doi.org/10.1177/036319908400900402
Abstract
The Western European folk model of spinsterhood portrays the spinster as a woman who eschews marriage because of economic difficulties or who deliberately chooses a career other than marriage. How does this model fare in other societies? Using population registers covering a single village in Japan in the preindustrial period (1671-1871), this paper finds that spinsters are rare. There are few economic bars to marriage, but, more importantly, there are no careers for unmarried women. They do not serve as domestic servants or as sur rogates in other roles in the household; they do not occupy specialist helping roles, and they do not become religieuses. On the contrary, even women whose prospects are slim are deliberately placed in households as married women. Hence, spinsterhood in Western Europe is an anomaly. Its existence must be ex plained, not assumed.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- "Precious Balsam in a Fragile Glass" : the Ideology of Virginity in the Later Middle AgesJournal of Family History, 1983
- The Making of the Medieval Family: Symmetry, Structure, and SentimentJournal of Family History, 1983
- Recruitment Strategies for Household Succession: Rethinking Japanese Household OrganisationMan, 1983
- Retirement, Inheritance, and Intergenerational Conflict in Preindustrial JapanJournal of Family History, 1983
- A Framework for Analyzing the Proximate Determinants of FertilityPopulation and Development Review, 1978
- Fertility, mortality, and life expectancy in pre-modern JapanPopulation Studies, 1974
- YOUNGER SONS IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURYHistory, 1969
- Farm Family By-employments in Preindustrial JapanThe Journal of Economic History, 1969
- The Go-Between in a Developing Society: The Case of the Japanese Marriage ArrangerHuman Organization, 1961
- English Villagers of the Thirteenth CenturyPublished by Harvard University Press ,1941