Mochizuki Yuriko | |
Native Name: | 望月百合子 |
Native Name Lang: | ja |
Birth Date: | 5 September 1900 |
Birth Place: | Minamikoma District, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan |
Death Place: | Japan |
Nationality: | Japanese |
Credits: | , which produces label "Notable credit(s)"; or by |
Works: | , which produces label "Works"; or by |
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Office: | may be used as an alternative when the label is better rendered as "Office" (e.g. public office or appointments) --> |
Movement: | Anarchist feminism |
Mochizuki Yuriko (Japanese: 望月百合子; 1900–2001) was a Japanese anarchist-feminist writer and activist. A leading figure in the early Japanese feminist movement, she cut her hair short and advocated for women's suffrage, but eventually split from others in the feminist movement over her political views. She joined up with other anarchist-feminists, including Takamure Itsue, in criticising both Marxist feminism and the antifeminism of male anarchists. Following the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, she and other revolutionary feminists moved to Manchukuo, fleeing political repression in Japan. There she established women's schools and criticised the chauvinism displayed by Japanese settler colonists, although she herself played her own role in the expansionism of the Empire of Japan.
Mochizuki Yuriko was born in 1900.
Having travelled abroad to study in Europe, after World War I ended, she returned to Japan, aspiring to become a novelist. She was one of the first Japanese women that cut her hair short during the 1920s, at a time that the feminist ideal of the "new woman" was gaining traction, although she rejected the label herself. She recalled people reacting with shock and indignation at her new bob cut, especially in her small hometown, where her appearance caused such scandal that she was forced to move to Tokyo. Nevertheless, she continued to insist that women's liberation required that women rid themselves of "encumbering entrapments", from long hair to the kimono, which she believed prevented women's social advancement.
Mochizuki became a major contributor to the feminist journal Nyonin Geijutsu; in its inaugural issue, she advocated for women's suffrage in Japan. She also wrote about her experiences with poverty. She and many of her fellow contributors stopped writing for the journal, due to political differences. They went on to establish the newsletter Kagayaku, which they saw as more in line with the founding principles of their previous publication.
Alongside Takamure Itsue, Mochizuki was one of the leading figures of Japanese anarchist-feminism, who advocated for the abolition of patriarchy and the state. Mochizuki and Takamure participated in debates against Marxist feminists, out of which, in February 1930, they established the anarchist-feminist magazine Fujin sensen (English: The Woman's Front), with Takamure as editor-in-chief. The journal was critical of Marxist feminists, as well as male anarchists, even taking aim the inegalitarian tendencies of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Mikhail Bakunin and Peter Kropotkin. At this time, Mochizuki travelled to France, bringing back with her contributions from European anarchist-feminists and writing a biography about the French libertarian Louise Michel.
In the wake of the Mukden incident in 1931, Nyonin Geijutsu was banned from publication. A wave of political repression followed in Japan, forcing many Japanese revolutionaries and left-wing activists to move to Manchukuo, where they attempted to continue their social and political initiatives. Mochizuki and other Kagayaku contributors were among those that relocated to Manchukuo. Mochizuki herself spent 10 years in Manchukuo, where she attempted to establish a "modern utopia". She set up a number of schools, where she taught both Japanese expatriate and native Manchu women; one of her goals being to teach Japanese women the local Manchu language.
Mochizuki was highly critical of Japanese settler colonists in Manchukuo, who segregated themselves from their Manchu neighbours and refused to integrate into Manchurian society. She likewise rejected Japanese complaints that Manchurian women weren't assimilating to Japanese culture, pointing out that many Japanese colonists were young, single men, and thus failed to uphold Japanese cultural ideals on women in society. She wrote of Japanese people that had moved to Xinjing, that "perhaps because the New Capital is small, the Japanese here seem to be as if in a close-up, and we can see the good and the bad."
Historian Masuzō Tanaka placed Mochizuki and her fellow feminist Taiko Hirabayashi at the centre of his analysis of Japanese women's role in the expansionism of the Empire of Japan.
Mochizuki supported Tsuneko Gauntlett's initiatives to hold a Pan-Pacific Women's Conference in 1937, shortly before the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War.
Mochizuki Yuriko died in 2001.